02138nam 2200349 450 991047693830332120230513085610.0(CKB)4970000000012489(NjHacI)994970000000012489(EXLCZ)99497000000001248920230513d2016 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierDisrupted idylls nature, equality, and the feminine in sentimentalist Russian women's writing (Mariia Pospelova, Mariia Bolotnikova, and Anna Naumova) /Ursula StohlerBern :Peter Lang International Academic Publishers,2016.1 online resource (357 pages)3-631-66803-1 Sentimentalist gender concepts: their western socio-political origins and their reception in Russia -- Literary impacts of sentimentalist gender conceptions in Russia -- Responses to sentimentalist gender conceptions -- The woman writer as interpreter of creation: Mariia Pospelova -- Criticism of sentimentalist conventions: Mariia Bolotnikova -- Revisions of sentimentalist gender concepts: Anna Naumova.The study provides a close analysis of literary works by women in late-18th- and early-19th-century Russia, with a focus on Anna Naumova, Mariia Pospelova, and Mariia Bolotnikova. Political, social and feminist theories are applied to examine restrictions imposed on women. Women authors in particular were fettered by a culture of feminisation strongly influenced by the French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau. As Sentimentalism and its aesthetics began to give way to Romantic ideals, some provincial Russian women writers saw an opportunity to claim social equality, and to challenge traditional concepts of authorship and a view of women as mute and passive.Gender identityGender identity.305.3Stohler Ursula1357372NjHacINjHaclBOOK9910476938303321Disrupted idylls3363238UNINA