Publication year 2019
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Tags Women`s Studies, World History, Biography, Politics & Government, US History, Gender & Feminism
Women's Studies
This Study Guide Collection of nonfiction titles spans foundational Women's Studies texts such as Mary Wollstonecraft's A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, critical texts such as Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar's The Madwoman in the Attic, and contemporary best sellers like Men Explain Things to Me by Rebecca Solnit.
The Truths We Hold
The Ungrateful Refugee
The Vagina Monologues
The White Album
The Wolves
The Woman's Hour
The Woman They Could Not Silence
The Woman Warrior
The Women of Brewster Place
Thick: And Other Essays
This Bridge Called My Back
Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay
Three Guineas
Three Women
To Room Nineteen
Trampoline
Trick Mirror
Two Old Women
Two or Three Things I Know for Sure
Untamed
Publication year 2019
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Tags Women`s Studies, World History, Biography, Politics & Government, US History, Gender & Feminism
Publication year 368
Genre Book, Nonfiction
Themes Language, Memory, Immigration
Tags Immigration & Refugeeism, Gender & Feminism, Politics & Government, Race & Racism, Women`s Studies, Biography, Social Justice
The Ungrateful Refugee: What Immigrants Never Tell You is a 2019 memoir by novelist Dina Nayeri. It is her first nonfiction book and a finalist for the Kirkus Prize, the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, and the Clara Johnson Award for Women’s Literature. While Nayeri chronicles her childhood escape from post-revolution Iran and her struggle to build an identity, she interweaves modern tales of refugees mired in uncaring asylum systems.SummaryThe author and first-person narrator of... Read The Ungrateful Refugee Summary
Publication year 1996
Genre Play, Fiction
Themes Femininity, Sexual Identity, Art
Tags Drama, Gender & Feminism, Love & Sexuality, Women`s Studies, Trauma & Abuse, Dramatic Literature, Classic Fiction
Publication year 1979
Genre Essay Collection, Nonfiction
Themes The Past, Self Discovery, Literature, Truth & Lies, Trust & Doubt
Tags US History, Journalism, Politics & Government, Arts & Culture, Social Class, Women`s Studies, Trauma & Abuse, Grief & Death, American Literature, World History, Classic Fiction, Biography
Publication year 2018
Genre Play, Fiction
Themes Friendship, Coming of Age, Femininity
Tags Drama, Coming of Age, Sports, Women`s Studies, Education, Education, Modern Classic Fiction, Dramatic Literature
Publication year 2018
Genre Book, Nonfiction
Themes Gender Identity
Tags Women`s Studies, US History, Gender & Feminism, World History, Social Justice, Politics & Government
The Woman’s Hour (2018) is a nonfiction chronicle of the final battle for ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920, which gave American women the right to vote. The book explores the blood, sweat, and tears required to gain women’s suffrage in this country. Contrary to popular opinion, the process was neither quick nor easy. The events chronicled in the book take place during July and August of 1920 in Nashville, Tennessee. The author’s uses... Read The Woman's Hour Summary
Publication year 2021
Genre Biography, Nonfiction
Themes Mental Health, Perseverance, Justice, Revenge, Marriage, Family
Tags Gender & Feminism, US History, Trauma & Abuse, Women`s Studies, World History, Psychology, Psychology, Mental Illness, Biography
Publication year 1976
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Themes Gender Identity, Family
Tags Asian Literature, Chinese Literature, Women`s Studies, Education, Education, Gender & Feminism, Classic Fiction, Biography
The Woman Warrior (1976) is an experimental memoir by Chinese-American author Maxine Hong Kingston. The book weaves together stories of Kingston’s childhood in California and her mother’s youth in rural China with folklore, legend, and myth, defying easy genre classification.The book is divided into five parts. In the first, “No-Name Woman,” Kingston imagines different life stories for an aunt she never met—a woman who drowned herself and her baby after being expelled from her village... Read The Woman Warrior Summary
Publication year 1982
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Gender Identity, Race, Community, Femininity, Justice
Tags Historical Fiction, Relationships, African American Literature, Women`s Studies, Modern Classic Fiction, World History, Classic Fiction
First published in 1982, The Women of Brewster Place is Gloria Naylor’s debut novel and remains the African American author’s best-known work. The Women of Brewster Place was awarded the National Book Award for Best First Novel and was adapted into a miniseries in 1989 and a television show in 1990. Described as “a novel in seven stories,” the text consists of seven chapters that act as short stories, each one detailing the life of a Black woman living... Read The Women of Brewster Place Summary
Publication year 2019
Genre Essay Collection, Nonfiction
Themes Race, Beauty, Justice
Tags Creative Nonfiction, Gender & Feminism, Race & Racism, Social Justice, Politics & Government, African American Literature, Women`s Studies, Sociology
Tressie McMillan Cottom’s Thick: And Other Essays (2019) is a collection of personal essays that explore race, gender, and class in the US. McMillan Cottom is a professor of sociology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and an influential public intellectual whose writing has appeared in The Atlantic, Slate, The New York Times, and The Washington Post. Thick situates McMillan Cottom’s personal experiences within sociological and structural analysis to link her experiences to... Read Thick: And Other Essays Summary
Genre Essay Collection, Nonfiction
Themes Gender Identity, Race, Social Class
Tags Gender & Feminism, Creative Nonfiction, Race & Racism, Social Justice, Women`s Studies
This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color, edited by Cherríe Moraga and Gloria Anzaldúa, is a feminist literary collection of essays, prose, poems, and transcripts on the experiences of women of color and Third World women, in a mainly United States context. While many of the contributors may have been lesser-known beforehand, this anthology has become a foundational text in feminist theory. Originally published in 1981, it set precedence by delving... Read This Bridge Called My Back Summary
Publication year 2013
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Friendship, Loyalty & Betrayal, Safety & Danger, Fame, Literature, Trust & Doubt, Power & Greed, Nostalgia, Memory, Hate & Anger, Love, Perseverance, Conflict
Tags Historical Fiction, Italian Literature, Gender & Feminism, Relationships, Women`s Studies, Modern Classic Fiction, World History
Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay (2014) is the third book in pseudonymous Italian author Elena Ferrante’s world-acclaimed adult fiction series The Neapolitan Novels. The four-novel series chronicles the friendship between first-person narrator Elena Greco and Raffaella “Lila” Cerullo from childhood to old age in an impoverished neighborhood in Naples, Italy. Translated by Ann Goldstein, Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay documents the beginning of middle age, wherein the two women grapple with... Read Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay Summary
Publication year 1938
Genre Essay / Speech, Nonfiction
Tags The Bloomsbury Group, Women`s Studies, British Literature, Gender & Feminism, World History, Philosophy, Philosophy, Classic Fiction, Politics & Government
Three Guineas is a book-length essay structured as a letter from Virginia Woolf to an unnamed correspondent who has asked her for help with his efforts to “prevent war” (3). Three years after receiving the letter, and amidst the rise of fascism across Europe, Woolf has finally decided to respond. As a pacifist, she feels compelled to find a way to prevent another World War, though she is perturbed by the correspondent’s ideas, which ignore... Read Three Guineas Summary
Publication year 2019
Genre Biography, Nonfiction
Themes Femininity, Sexual Identity, Masculinity
Tags Love & Sexuality, Gender & Feminism, Trauma & Abuse, Women`s Studies, Modern Classic Fiction, Biography
Publication year 1958
Genre Short Story, Fiction
Themes Marriage, Place, Gender Identity
Tags Psychological Fiction, Modern Classic Fiction, Gender & Feminism, Relationships, British Literature, Women`s Studies, Education, Education, World History, Romance, Classic Fiction
Doris Lessing’s 1963 short story “To Room Nineteen” explores the theme of female independence and autonomy—and of how difficult these are to achieve, especially at the time Lessing wrote it. Any reader familiar with Virginia Woolf’s classic essay “A Room of One’s Own” will find similarities here. Lessing, a Nobel laureate and accomplished writer within multiple genres, investigates boundaries and conventions throughout the canon of her work, frequently breaking down dichotomies and questioning cultural assumptions... Read To Room Nineteen Summary
Publication year 2015
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Music
Tags Realistic Fiction, Women`s Studies, Modern Classic Fiction
Trampoline is an illustrated novel written by Robert Gipe. Ohio University Press published the novel in 2015. The story takes place in the fictional Canard County, located in the Appalachian Mountains of Kentucky. The narrator, Dawn Jewell, tells the story of the holiday season when she was 15 years old. Dawn is intelligent, creative, and thoughtful. She lives with her grandmother, whom she calls Mamaw, because her own mother, Momma, is too addicted to drugs... Read Trampoline Summary
Publication year 2019
Genre Essay Collection, Nonfiction
Themes Community, Femininity, Appearance & Reality
Tags Gender & Feminism, Women`s Studies, Modern Classic Fiction, Psychology, Psychology, Self-Improvement, Arts & Culture, Politics & Government
Publication year 1993
Genre Novel, Fiction
Tags Women`s Studies, World History, Historical Fiction, Fantasy, Fairy Tale & Folklore, Action & Adventure
In the 1993 novella Two Old Women by Velma Wallis, the harsh Alaskan climate and rigidity of tribal life set the stage for a life-changing journey marked by perseverance and passion. Faced with seemingly insurmountable odds, two elderly women find themselves in the fight of their lives, a fight they rise to with beauty and determination. The story of these two women, Sa’ and Ch’idzigyaak, has come to reverberate through the ages. Part of an... Read Two Old Women Summary
Publication year 1995
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Themes Sexual Identity, Family, Gender Identity, Femininity, Masculinity, Race, Good & Evil, Literature, Loyalty & Betrayal, Trust & Doubt, Truth & Lies, Self Discovery
Tags LGBTQ+, Gender & Feminism, Trauma & Abuse, Women`s Studies, Love & Sexuality, Biography
Two or Three Things I Know for Sure is a 1995 memoir by American author and activist Dorothy Allison, a native of Greenville, South Carolina. A coming-of-age story that examines feminism and lesbian identity in the context of the patriarchal norms of the South, the book uses both narrative and photographs to tell the stories of the women in Allison’s family and their complex relationships with the men who both loved and abused them. Her... Read Two or Three Things I Know for Sure Summary
Publication year 2020
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Themes Gender Identity, Sexual Identity, Femininity, Trust & Doubt
Tags Gender & Feminism, LGBTQ+, Women`s Studies, Self-Improvement, Biography
Published in 2020, Glennon Doyle’s Untamed is her third memoir. An accomplished writer, philanthropist, and activist, Doyle documents her lifelong journey of self-discovery and uses personal experiences to encourage women on their own respective journeys towards freedom. Through the intersections of gender, sexuality, religion, and race, Doyle unpacks the social conditioning that affects the lives of all humans, particularly women. Ultimately, Doyle offers a reflective guide to navigating life by looking internally and honoring one’s... Read Untamed Summary