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Western feminist classics
Western feminist classics: A Room of My Own, Second Sex, Female Eunuch and How to Restrain Female Writing, I don't believe in myths.

Virginia Woolf's My Room (1929)

This long article comes from two lectures given by British writer Woolf at Cambridge University, the theme of which is women and novels. Woolf has the temperament of a poet, thinker and novelist. Her language is concise, wise and poetic, which not only captures the ambiguity in daily life, but also points to the depths of the vast universe.

2. simone de beauvoir's The Second Sex (1949).

Simone de beauvoir's The Second Sex is divided into two parts. The first part is facts and myths. She analyzes the gender perspective and female prejudice in male writers' works from the perspectives of biology, psychoanalysis and historical materialism. The second part is practical experience. She explored a revolutionary road from the perspective of women's growth experience and life role.

3. Female eunuchs in Germaine Greer's works (1970).

The Female Eunuch is a doctoral thesis of Australian scholar Germaine Greer. This book is divided into five chapters: body, soul, love, hatred and revolution. Using the theories of biology, psychology and sociology, this paper makes a comparative analysis of the two sexes and comprehensively analyzes the myth, slavery and stigma surrounding women. The language is long, accurate, sharp, powerful and aggressive.

4. How to Restrain Women's Writing by Joanna Lars (1983)

This book is a collection of literary works by American science fiction writer Joanna Lars. She summed up the obstacles faced by women's writing with examples of various writers in history, such as lack of role models, classification errors, demotion of achievements, slander and deprivation of signatures. The language is straightforward and sharp. She collected some neglected works and criticized those famous writers (Dickens and Hemingway).

5. Orina farage's I Don't Believe in Myths (2023)

I Don't Believe in Myths was edited from the press release and biographical text of farage, the first female journalist in the world. Her outspoken views on work, travel, love and freedom, writing and faith are very concise, and her views are extremely clear, and her self is so clear and personal.