Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1860-1935) was a pioneering American feminist and the author of dramas, dialogues, poetry, nearly two hundred short stories and several novels. Her nonfiction work covered the subjects of economics, education, religion, women's rights, and much more.
She is best known for the fantastic utopian novel Herland and for the germinal short story "The Yellow Wallpaper", which only form a minuscule sample of her work, but feminist efforts have brought some of her other writings back into print.
Bibliography
Fiction
- "The Yellow Wall-Paper" (1892)
- What Diantha Did (1910)
- The Crux (1911)
- Moving the Mountain (1911)
- Benigna Machiavelli (1914)
- Herland (1915)
- With Her in Ourland (1916)
- The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader (1980)
- The Yellow Wall-Paper and Other Stories (1995)
- Unpunished: A Mystery (1998) (posthumous first-time printing)
Nonfiction
- Women and Economics (1898)
- Concerning Children (1900)
- The Home: Its Work and Influence (1903)
- Human Work (1904)
- The Man-Made World; or, Our Andocentric Culture (1911)
- Our Brains and What Ails Them. (1912)
- Humanness (1913)
- Social Ethics (1914)
- The Dress of Women (1915)
- Growth and Combat (1916)
- His Religion and Hers (1923)
- The Living of Charlotte Perkins Gilman: An Autobiography (1935)
Poetry
External Links
- Biblio and Links on Charlotte Perkins Gilman
- Biographical info
- Charlotte Perkins Gilman, A Guide to Research
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