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WOMEN'S HISTORY AND LITERATURE
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Manuscript Women's Letters and Diaries
from the American Antiquarian Society,
1750-1950--PREPUBLICATION ANNOUNCEMENT
High-quality
images of original manuscripts, covering 200 years,
extensively indexed and online for the first time comprise
this collection. In many cases, we also include the
replies, from both men and women, placing the letters in
their full context. Alexander Street is excited to offer
this collection from the American Antiquarian Society,
extensively indexed and online for the first time.

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Women and Social Movements in the United States, Basic and
Scholar's Edition
Women and
Social Movements in the
U.S.
Basic Edition
provides you with deep insight into the multiplicity of
American women’s activism in public life. A variety of
primary source documents including images, scholarly essays,
book reviews and more allow for a thorough investigation of
the changes in American culture beginning in the 1600s and
continuing through today.
The new Scholar's Edition features enhanced
content and search tools that make it ideal for research and
scholarship. It includes the Basic Edition plus 75,000
additional pages of previously inaccessible data and
statistics from the publications of local and state
commissions on women since 1963.
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The "Second Wave" and
Beyond: a Women and Social Movements community
The "Second Wave" and Beyond is a
free, online scholarly community associated with
Women and Social Movements. Three scholar-editors
host this online community, and more than 150 people
have become registered members so far. Participants
analyze compelling questions about feminist activism
and theories; collaborate on new directions for historical
research; share bibliographies, unpublished papers,
chronologies, images, oral histories, links to external
Web sites, book reviews, reviews of new Web resources,
syllabi, and other materials; and explore new ways
in publishing, writing, and recording the history of
contemporary feminism. Content is continually updated
through member participation, with many rare and otherwise
unavailable items added regularly. Visit it free now
at http://scholar.alexanderstreet.com.
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Irish
Women Poets of the Romantic Period
This
collection
comprises more than
eighty volumes of poetry by Irish women writing between 1768
and 1842, a significant, but largely underappreciated body
of work. Most of the texts are rare, existing in print in
fewer than five libraries in the world. Along with the
poetic texts are biographical and critical essays
contributed by the world’s foremost poetry scholars and
other supporting resources.
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Black Women Writers
Black Women Writers brings together more
than 100,000 pages of literature and essays written by black
women from Africa and the African Diaspora in electronic
format for the first time. Facing sexism and racism at the
same time, black women have needed to create their own
identities and movements. This collection documents that
effort from its earliest beginnings. With this landmark
collection, Alexander Street makes accessing these resources
easy at last, bringing scholars the voices of African women
along with a tool for understanding the feminine perspective
on the diversity and development of black people in the
Diaspora.
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North American Women's Drama
This major new initiative delivers 1,500 plays by women from
the United States and Canada, including the complete works
of leading playwrights along with those of lesser-known but
important writers. Many of the plays are rare, hard to find,
or out of print. Relevant for the study of literature, women's
studies, and the history of feminism.

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North American Women's Letters and Diaries, Colonial to 1950
Our flagship collection, this is a massive, ongoing project
to catalog and index American and Canadian women's diaries
and correspondence over centuries. Researchers will have access
to 150,000 pages of materials, including more than 5,000 pages
of previously unpublished manuscripts as facsimile images.
Drawn from more than 1,000 sources and representing 1,500
women from all walks of life, the writings are extensively
indexed. Databases of women, sources, personal events, historical
events, a geographical table, and other features make the
writings useful to researchers in history, sociology, literature,
genealogy, women’s studies, and related fields.
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British and Irish Women's Letters and Diaries
The personal writings of women from England, Scotland,
Ireland, and Wales, spanning more than 400 years, are in
this collection. Researchers can explore the thoughts,
observations, and experiences of both famous and ordinary
women on all subjects. The collection begins in 1500 and
moves through to World War II. It includes
never-before-published materials from the Imperial War
Museum in England.

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Scottish Women Poets of the Romantic Period
Edited by Nancy Kushigian and Stephen Behrendt, Scottish
Women Poets of the Romantic Period contains over 60 volumes
of rare lyric poetry, together with reviews, essays and associated
bibliographical and biographical material written between
1789 and 1832. Conventional anthologies and histories of
Scottish literature have been composed largely of the works of
male authors. Seldom have any but the most specialized
twentieth-century literary histories of the period paid
serious attention to the dozens of Scottish women poets who
were active at the time and whose work and influence were in
many instances familiar and admired by their male
contemporaries.
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Black Short Fiction
and Folklore
Black Short Fiction and Folklore brings together 8,000 works by
writers from Africa and the African Diaspora, from the earliest
times to the present. Drawn from early literary magazines,
archives, and the personal collections of the authors, much
of the collection is fugitive, ephemeral, or previously unpublished.
It presents a variety of traditions ranging from early African
oral traditions to today’s hip-hop and covers fables,
parables, ballads, folktales, short stories, trickster tales,
story cycles, and novellas. For scholars of history, sociology,
anthropology, and literature. Click here
for details.
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Latin American Women
Writers
Latin America is immense not only in its size—twice
the area of Europe, and stretching from the Rio Grande in
Texas to Cape Horn in Patagonia—but in its range of
cultural and literary expression. What we call “Latin
American culture” is a composite of the rich and diverse
output of 20 sovereign countries. Each had its unique struggle
for independence and particular ways in which it evolved after
the end of colonization. Literature is the best blueprint
for following the social and cultural developments within
these Ibero-American nations. In Latin American Women
Writers, Alexander Street Press presents an electronic
collection of literature by Latin American women from the
colonial period in the seventeenth century forward to the
present. The 100,000 pages of works in their original
languages comprise literary works, memoirs, letters, and
essays. |
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©
Copyright 2006 Alexander Street Press. All rights reserved.
Last Updated:
13-Jun-2008
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