These are the sources and citations used to research References. This bibliography was generated on Cite This For Me on
In-text: (Brown, 1989)
Your Bibliography: Brown, M., 1989. Women, Folklore and Feminism. Journal of Folklore Research, 26(3), pp.259-264.
In-text: (Farrer, 1975)
Your Bibliography: Farrer, C., 1975. Women and folklore. Austin: University of Texas Press.
In-text: (Jordan and de Caro, 1986)
Your Bibliography: Jordan, R. and de Caro, F., 1986. Women and the Study of Folklore. Signs, 11(3), p.500.
In-text: (Jordan and Kalčik, 1985)
Your Bibliography: Jordan, R. and Kalčik, S., 1985. Women's folklore, women's culture. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
In-text: (Kousaleos, 1999)
Your Bibliography: Kousaleos, N., 1999. Feminist Theory and Folklore. [online] Available at: <http://hdl.handle.net/2022/2319> [Accessed 18 December 2014].
In-text: (O'Connor, Jordan and Kalčik, 1986)
Your Bibliography: O'Connor, A., Jordan, R. and Kalčik, S., 1986. Women's Folklore, Women's Culture. Béaloideas, 54/55, p.302.
In-text: (Ragan, 2009)
Your Bibliography: Ragan, K., 2009. What Happened to the Heroines in Folktales? An Analysis by Gender of a Multicultural Sample of Published Folktales Collected from Storytellers. Marvels & Tales, 23(2), pp.227-247.
In-text: (Saltzman, 1987)
Your Bibliography: Saltzman, R., 1987. Folklore, Feminism, and the Folk: Whose Lore Is It?. The Journal of American Folklore, 100(398), p.548.
In-text: (Stone, 1975)
Your Bibliography: Stone, K., 1975. Things Walt Disney Never Told Us. The Journal of American Folklore, 88(347), p.42.
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