![]() "Female Fantastic: The Case of George Sand." L'Esprit Createur 28, no. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987, 183 p.įocusing on Sand's use of the father figure, explores a woman's depiction of the Oedipal triangle from the daughter's perspective. Family Romances: George Sand's Early Novels. Traces Sand's literary development through her early writings, most of which were not published in her lifetime. "Writing a Self: From Aurore Dudevant to George Sand." Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature 14, no. 4 (summer 1976): 438-49.Īrgues that Sand's autobiography and fiction constitute attempts to define herself by integrating the opposing tendencies represented by the two mother figures in her life.Ĭrecelius, Kathryn J. "George Sand: The Fictions of Autobiography." Nineteenth-Century French Studies 4, no. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1977, 436 p.Īddresses Sand's achievement in terms of her works and the events of her life, asserting that she was "quintessentially the modern woman."īrée, Germaine. ![]() New York: Basic Books, 1978, 339 p.Ĭritical biography of Sand, examining in particular her struggle to understand herself as a woman and a human being. ![]() ![]() The Double Life of George Sand, Woman and Writer. Provides an in-depth look at Sand's life and work. George Sand: A Biography, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1975, 812 p. ![]()
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