The debate about women's writing - is it too restricted, domestic and love-obsessed, in contrast to the more sweeping, historical, socially aware and experimental novels of men? - has been going on since Jane Austen's day. Charlotte Brontė was one who rejected Austen's plot, which she called 'a carefully fenced, highly cultivated garden'. Recently Gillian Beer even announced the death of the traditional women's novel: instead of the masochistic themes of unrequited love, she said at the Hay Festival, 'women have freed themselves to write more forcefully about much larger networks, wars, families, communities, national change, terrorism and history.'
LRB 11 July 2002 | PDF Download
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