Modernism, Sex, and Gender (New Modernisms) vs The Circuit of Apollo: Eighteenth-Century Women’s Tributes to Women (Early Modern Feminisms)
Overall winner: Modernism, Sex, and Gender (New Modernisms)
Key Differences
Choose The Circuit of Apollo (A) if you want a more affordable, wide-ranging eighteenth-century feminist literary study with many contributors; pick Modernism, Sex, and Gender (B) if you need focused modernist and gender studies scholarship from the New Modernisms series and slightly more user feedback (three reviews). A emphasizes early modern women writers and thematic feminist history, while B centers on modernism, sex, and gender within a named series
Modernism, Sex, and Gender (New Modernisms)
An academic book exploring modernist perspectives on gender and sexuality. Key benefit: scholarly insights for feminist literary criticism. Customer insight: measured appreciation from readers
Pros
- academic rigor
- focused on gender and sexuality
- part of a recognized series
- clear scholarly perspectives
Cons
- dense reading level
- requires background in literary studies
The Circuit of Apollo: Eighteenth-Century Women’s Tributes to Women (Early Modern Feminisms)
A scholarly study of eighteenth-century womens tributes to women within early modern feminisms. Examines literary criticism and historical context to illuminate female-centered advocacy. Customer insight note highlights interest in feminist literary analysis
Pros
- focused scholarly analysis
- multi-author perspective
- historical context included
- relevant to feminist literary criticism
Cons
- limited customer insight data
- no features listed
Head-to-Head
| Criteria | Winner |
|---|---|
| Price | Laura Runge, Jessica Cook, Claudia Thomas Kairoff, Nicolle Jordan, Christine Gerrard, Kathryn R. King, Catherine Ingrassia, Laura Tallon, Natasha Duquette, Susan S. Lanser, Katharine Kittredge, Shelley King, Betty A. Schellenberg |
| Durability | Tie |
| Versatility | Celia Marshik, Allison Pease, Gayle Rogers, Sean Latham |
| User Reviews | Celia Marshik, Allison Pease, Gayle Rogers, Sean Latham |