@article{kzm 72180, author = {Sabina Versieck}, title = {"The blindfold test": sekse en auteurschap}, volume = {57}, year = {2003}, url = {https://openjournals.ugent.be/kzm/article/id/72180/}, issue = {0}, doi = {10.21825/kzm.v57i0.17301}, abstract = {<p>Is there a recognisable gender difference in the way men and women write?<br>Is it possible to tell an author's gender from his or her prose? Or as E.M.<br>Forster puts it: when you are reading a book can you teil instinctively whether<br>it is the work of a man or a woman? Virginia Woolf is concerned with these<br>questions in (a.o.) A Room of One's Own; E.M. Forster writes about them in<br>The Feminine Note in Literature. Both Woolf's views and those of E.M.<br>Forster on the difference between men's writing and women's writing and on<br>sexual difference in general are examined and compared and put in a broader<br>context.</p>}, month = {12}, pages = {37-54}, issn = {2736-2175}, publisher={Koninklijke Zuid-Nederlandse Maatschappij voor Taal- en Letterkunde en Geschiedenis}, journal = {Handelingen - Koninklijke Zuid-Nederlandse maatschappij voor taal- en letterkunde en geschiedenis} }