On Women Writers & Their Dads – Chicago Review of Books

On Women Writers & Their Dads – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In her 1938 essay, “The Three Guineas,” Virginia Woolf christened herself, along with her literary predecessors, as “the daughters of educated men.” Though she referenced only three fathers by name, the paternal influence she described can indeed be applied to a remarkable number of female writers from ages past. For varying reasons, Fanny Burney, … Read more

Rediscovered Women Writers Get Their Moment – Chicago Review of Books

Rediscovered Women Writers Get Their Moment – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Is there a more back-handed compliment than to be called a “woman before her time”? There’s something self-congratulatory in the appellation, how it’s both dismissive of an artist’s work in the moment while anticipating a better future for them that might never arrive. Yet it’s a description that seems to be trotted back out … Read more