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Tracing the literary relationship between British women and the Asiatic Society of Bengal, Kathryn Freeman argues that women writers, distinct from their male counterparts, interrogated Orientalist distortions of India through the lens of gender. Her study invites us to rethink the Romantic paradigm of canonical writers as replicators of Orientalists' cultural imperialism in favor of a more complicated stance that accommodates the differences between male and female authors with respect to India.

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Produktbeschreibung
Tracing the literary relationship between British women and the Asiatic Society of Bengal, Kathryn Freeman argues that women writers, distinct from their male counterparts, interrogated Orientalist distortions of India through the lens of gender. Her study invites us to rethink the Romantic paradigm of canonical writers as replicators of Orientalists' cultural imperialism in favor of a more complicated stance that accommodates the differences between male and female authors with respect to India.

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Autorenporträt
Kathryn S. Freeman is Professor of English at the University of Miami, USA. She is the author of Blake's Nostos: Fragmentation and Nondualism in The Four Zoas; A Guide to Blake's Cosmology; Rethinking the Romantic Era: Androgyny and Subjectivity in the Writings of Mary Robinson, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Mary Shelley; and Through the Fiction of Phebe Gibbes: Women, Alienation, and Prodigality in the Long Eighteenth Century.