Katherine Binhammer

Standard Name: Binhammer, Katherine

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Textual Features Sarah Fielding
This is a work of fiction, not documentary. It relates the stories of four ex-prostitutes sympathetically, presenting a strong argument for social reform. According to scholar Katherine Binhammer , it is the most feminist among...

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Texts

Forster, Antonia. “’A Considerable Rank in the World of Belles Lettres’: women, fiction, and literary history in the last quarter of the eighteenth century”. Women and Literary History: ’For There She Was’, edited by Katherine Binhammer and Jeanne Wood, University of Delaware Press, 2003, pp. 106-18.
Binhammer, Katherine. “Changing the Sex of Sensibility: Cross-Dressing in Robinsons WalsinghamAmerican Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (ASECS) Conference, Austin, TX.
Binhammer, Katherine et al. “Introduction: Feminist Literary Historiography”. Women and Literary History: ’For There She Was’, edited by Katherine Binhammer and Jeanne Wood, University of Delaware Press, 2003, pp. 9-23.
Raitt, Suzanne. “Literary History as Exorcism: May Sinclair Meets the Brontës”. Women and Literary History: ’For There She Was’, edited by Katherine Binhammer and Jeanne Wood, University of Delaware Press, 2003, pp. 187-00.
Gerson, Carole. “Recuperating from Modernism: Pauline Johnson’s Challenge to Literary History”. Women and Literary History: ’For There She Was’, edited by Katherine Binhammer and Jeanne Wood, University of Delaware Press, 2003, pp. 167-86.
Binhammer, Katherine. “The Virtue of Vice in the Histories of Penitent Prostitutes”. American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (ASECS) Conference, Las Vegas, NV.