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McGrath, Lynette. “‘Let Us Have Our Libertie Againe’: Amelia Lanyer 17th Centery Feminist Voice.” Women’s Studies 20 (1992): 331-48. Web. JSTOR. 2 Oct. 2015. Lynette McGrath- Lanyer’s book engages “an acceptably conventional topic or genre to conceal a level of subversive discourse” (McGrath 341). McGrath—Lanyer “pursues the revolutionary possibility of self-defintion” (McGrath 341). McGrath, Lynette. “Metaphoric Subversions” Feasts and Mirrors in Aemilia Lanyer’s Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum.Literature, Interpretation, Theory 3 (1991): 101-13. Web. JSTOR. 2 Oct. 2015.

MLA Citation Style and Notes for McGrath

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Page 1: MLA Citation Style and Notes for McGrath

McGrath, Lynette. “‘Let Us Have Our Libertie Againe’: Amelia Lanyer 17th Centery Feminist Voice.” Women’s Studies 20 (1992): 331-48. Web. JSTOR. 2 Oct. 2015.

Lynette McGrath- Lanyer’s book engages “an acceptably conventional topic or genre to conceal a level of subversive discourse” (McGrath 341). McGrath—Lanyer “pursues the revolutionary possibility of self-defintion” (McGrath 341).

McGrath, Lynette. “Metaphoric Subversions” Feasts and Mirrors in Aemilia Lanyer’s Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum.” Literature, Interpretation, Theory 3 (1991): 101-13. Web. JSTOR. 2 Oct. 2015.