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This book explores the figure of the modern woman in the essays and fiction of Federica Montseny (1905-1994), a prominent Spanish anarchist leader during the 1920s and 1930s. It examines in depth the author's theories of gender in light of the basic principles of anarchist political thought and philosophy. In addition, Montseny's novels are shown to engage in an elaborate and critical dialogue with scientific and cultural discourses on women that proliferated during the first four decades of the 20th century. Montseny's ideal modern woman is not a static and definite figure; rather, she shifts across different and at times contradictory articulations that, nonetheless, all fall within her anarchist beliefs. Montseny, a popular politician and writer during her time, developed and disseminated some of the most original concepts dealing with women's emancipation and gender theory, and the present volume is the first to situate her thought as a key component within the evolution of Spanish feminism..
Nuria Cruz-C©Łmara is Professor of Spanish at the University of Tennessee.
Women in literature --- Montseny, Federica --- Criticism and interpretation --- Montseny, Federica - Criticism and interpretation --- Women in literature. --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Woman (Christian theology) in literature --- Women in drama --- Women in poetry --- Mañé, Federica Montseny, --- Montseny Mañé, Federica, --- Montseny, Frederica, --- 1920s. --- 1930s. --- Federica Montseny. --- Spanish anarchist leader. --- Spanish feminism. --- gender theory. --- modern woman. --- women's emancipation.
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