01908cam a2200385 a 4500001001400000003000800014005001700022006001900039007001500058008004100073020003800114040003000152049002600182050002200208082001800230100002900248245012300277260004000400300003800440504005100478520053800529521001701067588004701084650005101131650002801182650002501210650002901235650005001264655002901314710001601343776003501359856009301394942001601487999001901503EDZ0000174453StDuBDS20161031105230.0m||||||||d||||||||cr |||||||||||131121s2013 ii fo| 001|0|eng d a9788132114093 (ebook) :cNo price aStDuBDSbengcStDuBDSepn aAlfaisal Main Library 0aPN3401b.S83 201304a809.300822231 aSubramanian, Shreerekha.10aWomen writing violenceh[electronic resource] :bthe novel and radical feminist imaginaries /cShreerekha Subramanian. aNew Delhi ;aLondon :bSAGE,c2013. a1 online resource (xxxix, 269 p.) aIncludes bibliographical references and index.8 a'Women Writing Violence' engages with select contemporary novels in which women characters resist violence and redefine notions of community by imagining bonds with the exiled and the disempowered. The author interweaves the literary landscapes of African-American writer Toni Morrison with the oeuvre of South Asian writers Mridula Garg, Tahmina Durrani, Amrita Pritam Bapsi Sidhwa and Mahasweta Devi. This results in the opening of a new gateway into the thinking about violence and survival through a feminist, transnational lens. aSpecialized. aDescription based on print version record. 0aFictionxWomen authorsxHistory and criticism. 0aViolence in literature. 0aWomen in literature. 0aFeminism and literature. 0aFictiony20th centuryxHistory and criticism. 7aElectronic books.2local2 aSage eBooks08iPrint version :z978813210908240uhttp://ezproxy.alfaisal.edu/login?url=http://sk.sagepub.com/books/women-writing-violence 2lcccEBOOKS c482277d482277