The last thirty years of intellectual and artistic creativity in the 20th century have been marked by gender issues
1. Historical Background
The Women's Movement and the Idea of Gender
Women and Language
Gender and Translation
2. Gender and the Practice of Translation
Experimental Feminist Writing and its Translation
Translating the Body
Translating Puns of Cultural References
Translating Experiments with Language
Interventionist Feminist Translation
Translating Machismo
Assertive Feminist Translation
Recovering Women's Works 'Lost' in Patriarchy
Further Corrective Measures
3. Revising Theories and Myths
Proliferating Prefaces: The Translator's Sense of Self
Asserting the Translator's Identity
Claiming Responsibility for 'Meaning'
Revising the Rhetoric of Translation
Tropes
Achieving Political Visibility
Revising a Fundamental Myth
Pandora's Cornucopia
4. Reading and Rewriting Translations
Reading Existing Translations
Simone de Beauvoir
Rewriting Existing Translations
The Bible
Comparing 'Pre-feminist' and 'Post-feminist Translations
Sappho and Louise Labé
Recovering 'Lost' Women Translators
Subversive Activity in the English Renaissance
Nineteenth-Century Women Translators
La Malinche
5. Criticisms
Criticism from Outside Feminisms
Criticism from Within Feminisms
Elitist Experimentation
Opportunist Feminist Bandwagon
'Being Democratic with Minorities'
Revealing Women's Cultural and Political Diversity
6. Future Perspectives
Broad Historical Perspectives
Contemporary Perspectives
Public Language Policies
Interpreting
7. Concluding Remarks