Category:Women Authorship--1900s
Women Authorship (1900s) -- History of research -- Overview The Westminster sisters, Agnes Smith Lewis and Margaret Dunlop Gibson worked and resided at Cambridge. Although the University of Cambridge never honored them with degrees (it did not admit women to degrees until 1948), they received honorary degrees from the universities of Halle, Heidelberg, Dublin, and St Andrews. Alice Guy-Blaché was the first female film director. In 1906 she directed an innovative Life of Jesus, which changed the then traditional cinematic presentations and opened the path to the first "modern" Jesus movies of the 1910s.
Women Authorship (1900s) -- Highlights
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Pages in category "Women Authorship--1900s"
The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total.
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- Hannah and Her Seven Sons (1902 Louis), poetry
- For Liberty (1903 Jacobson), children's play
- Under the Stars (1903 Kingsley), novel
- Mary Magdalen (1904 Evans), play
- An Unrecorded Miracle (1904 Kingsley), novel
- Tor, A Street Boy of Jerusalem (1904 Kingsley), novel
- Kristuslegender (Christ Legends / 1904 Lagerlöf), novel
- La naissance, la vie et la mort de N.-S. Jésus-Christ (The Birth, the Life and the Death of Christ / 1906 Guy-Blaché), feature film
- Saul of Tarsus (1906 Miller), novel
- Christ Legends = Kristuslegender (1908 @1904 Lagerlöf / Howard), novel (English ed.)
- The City of Delight (1908 Miller), novel
- The Star of Love (1909 Kingsley), novel