FEMINIST CRITICISM
Feminism
Feminism is the ideology that believes in the
equal rights and opportunities for women in
education, employment and in the cultural and
social life. There are differences between the
ideas of feminists around the world so that no
one description can fit all varieties of feminist
views.
Early Feminism
      One of the earliest feminist writings is Mary
  Wollstonecraft’s Vindication of the Rights of Women
  (1792) in which she criticizes stereotypes of women as
  emotional and instinctive and argues that women
  should aspire to the same rationality prized by men.
  Wollstonecraft believed that women should enjoy
  social, legal, and intellectual equality with men.
      John Stuart Mill’s essay on the Subjection of
  Women (1869) is a defense of gender equality in which
  he attacks the idea that women are naturally incapable
  of doing things that men can do, and should, therefore,
  be forbidden from doing them.
The Feminist Movement
   First-wave feminism started in the
nineteenth century and early twentieth
century in the U.K.and US. It focused on
the promotion of equal rights for women.
By the end of the nineteenth century, the
focus was more on political rights,
particularly the right of women's suffrage.
The            Second-wave
feminism is a movement that
began in the early 1960s and
continues to the present. The
French philosopher Simone de
Beauvoir discussed many of
the questions of feminism and
feminists' sense of injustice in
her groundbreaking book Le
Deuxième Sexe (The Second
Sex), published in 1949.
The second wave feminism is
largely concerned with social
and economic equality and
with ending discrimination and
the inequality of laws.
Feminist Literary Criticism
     Feminist literary criticism is a product of the
  feminist movement of the 1960s.
     Feminist criticism of the 1960s and 1970s
  concerned itself with the representation of women
  in literature as an expression of the social norms
  about women and their social roles and and as a
  means of socialization. It focused on the images of
  women in books by male writers to expose the
  patriarchal ideology and how women characters are
  portrayed. They try to show how male writings
  emphasize masculine dominance and superiority.
     In the 1980s, it switched its focus from attacking
  male representation of the of women to discovering
  forgotten and neglected works by women.
Anglo-American & French Schools
      While the French' feminists have adopted and adapted a great
  deal of post-structuralist and psychoanalytic criticism as the basis of
  much of their work, Anglo-American feminists has tended to be
  more skeptical about recent critical theory, and more cautious in
  using it.
      Anglo-American feminist critics treat literature as a series of
  representations of women's lives and experience which can be
  measured and evaluated against reality. They see the close reading
  and explication of individual literary texts as the major business of
  feminist criticism. Some place emphasis on the use of historical
  data and non-literary material (such as diaries, memoirs, social and
  medical history) in understanding the literary text.
      The American critic Elaine Showalter is usually taken as the
  major representative of this approach, but other exemplars would
  be Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar, and Patricia Meyer Spacks.

Feminist criticism

  • 1.
  • 2.
    Feminism Feminism is theideology that believes in the equal rights and opportunities for women in education, employment and in the cultural and social life. There are differences between the ideas of feminists around the world so that no one description can fit all varieties of feminist views.
  • 3.
    Early Feminism  One of the earliest feminist writings is Mary Wollstonecraft’s Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792) in which she criticizes stereotypes of women as emotional and instinctive and argues that women should aspire to the same rationality prized by men. Wollstonecraft believed that women should enjoy social, legal, and intellectual equality with men.  John Stuart Mill’s essay on the Subjection of Women (1869) is a defense of gender equality in which he attacks the idea that women are naturally incapable of doing things that men can do, and should, therefore, be forbidden from doing them.
  • 4.
    The Feminist Movement First-wave feminism started in the nineteenth century and early twentieth century in the U.K.and US. It focused on the promotion of equal rights for women. By the end of the nineteenth century, the focus was more on political rights, particularly the right of women's suffrage.
  • 5.
    The Second-wave feminism is a movement that began in the early 1960s and continues to the present. The French philosopher Simone de Beauvoir discussed many of the questions of feminism and feminists' sense of injustice in her groundbreaking book Le Deuxième Sexe (The Second Sex), published in 1949. The second wave feminism is largely concerned with social and economic equality and with ending discrimination and the inequality of laws.
  • 6.
    Feminist Literary Criticism  Feminist literary criticism is a product of the feminist movement of the 1960s.  Feminist criticism of the 1960s and 1970s concerned itself with the representation of women in literature as an expression of the social norms about women and their social roles and and as a means of socialization. It focused on the images of women in books by male writers to expose the patriarchal ideology and how women characters are portrayed. They try to show how male writings emphasize masculine dominance and superiority.  In the 1980s, it switched its focus from attacking male representation of the of women to discovering forgotten and neglected works by women.
  • 7.
    Anglo-American & FrenchSchools  While the French' feminists have adopted and adapted a great deal of post-structuralist and psychoanalytic criticism as the basis of much of their work, Anglo-American feminists has tended to be more skeptical about recent critical theory, and more cautious in using it.  Anglo-American feminist critics treat literature as a series of representations of women's lives and experience which can be measured and evaluated against reality. They see the close reading and explication of individual literary texts as the major business of feminist criticism. Some place emphasis on the use of historical data and non-literary material (such as diaries, memoirs, social and medical history) in understanding the literary text.  The American critic Elaine Showalter is usually taken as the major representative of this approach, but other exemplars would be Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar, and Patricia Meyer Spacks.