Zoran Božič (Avtor)

Povzetek

This paper is based on empirical research on the share of women authors in Slovenian secondary school literature textbooks between 1850 and 2000. The highest share (about 15%) of women authors was achieved after the Second World War and in contemporary textbooks. However, this share occurred in only one of three competing books, one which offers a considerably larger selection of authors than that required by the curriculum. The research showed that the share of women authors depends on the scope of the approach: the fewer authors that are included, the smaller is the likelihood of women authors being represented. With a very strict selection of nationally representative authors, the female gender is not represented at all. The gender of the selector(s) may influence the inclusion of women authors, but not necessarily: a textbookʼs editor may be a woman, yet still fail to include a single woman author. A comparison between textbooks and literary-historical selections shows that women authors in textbooks are less represented (due to limitations of the scope as determined by the included literary texts), and the selection criteria may also differ.

Ključne besede

canonization;didactics;women authors;literary history;secondary school textbooks;Slovenia;

Podatki

Jezik: Angleški jezik
Leto izida:
Tipologija: 1.01 - Izvirni znanstveni članek
Organizacija: UNG - Univerza v Novi Gorici
UDK: 82.0
COBISS: 4578043 Povezava se bo odprla v novem oknu
ISSN: 2241-8385
Št. ogledov: 4054
Št. prenosov: 208
Ocena: 0 (0 glasov)
Metapodatki: JSON JSON-RDF JSON-LD TURTLE N-TRIPLES XML RDFA MICRODATA DC-XML DC-RDF RDF

Ostali podatki

URN: URN:SI:UNG
Vrsta dela (COBISS): Delo ni kategorizirano
Strani: str. 239-249
Letnik: ǂVol. ǂ3
Zvezek: ǂiss. ǂ4
Čas izdaje: Dec. 2016
ID: 9225998
Priporočena dela:
, diplomsko delo univerzitetnega študijskega programa
, lecture at the International Conference Cultural Encounters through Reading and Writing, New Approaches to the History of Literary Culture, Glasgow Women's Library, 10 June 2016