“Highly significant and unique. . . . This study certainly will make an important contribution to the field. To date no similar studies have so exhaustively addressed how the working woman became a pivotal and contested figure during Spain’s long and uneven path toward modernization.”—Juli Highfill, author of Modernism and Its Merchandise: The Spanish Avant-Garde and Material Culture, 1920–1930
“This excellent book revitalizes readings of familiar authors such as Emilia Pardo Bazán and Carmen Martín Gaite through a new lens . . . and it introduces us to some lesser-known authors. . . . Thoroughly researched, theoretically sophisticated, and well argued, this book is an important contribution to our understanding of late nineteenth- and twentieth-century Spanish society and fiction.”—Roberta Johnson, author of Major Concepts in Spanish Feminist Theory