'Christine Arkinstall has written a thorough and thoughtful book. The book makes important contributions to the history of progressive movements and of feminism in Spain.' --Martha Ackelsberg, Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature vol 34:01:2015 'Arkinstall's well-written book is both a meticulous historical study and an insightful literary analysis This is an important book that fills a glaring gap in Spain's literary history and revises the alleged absence of turn-of-the century female intellectuals from the nation's socio-political scene.' --Margot Versteeg, SHARP News vol 24:03:2015 'This study expands both the literary and the historical scholarship of early Spanish Republicanism, freemasonry, and anarchism while making an indispensable contribution to the histories of early Spanish feminism and the Spanish press.' --Letras Femeninas, A Journal of Women and Gender Studies in Hispanic Literature and Culture - winter 2015 'This is a fascinating and enlightening work. Highly informative as well as comprising essential reading for the specialist, it will doubtless be of interest to the general reader of this period of European history too.' --Rhian Davies, Bulletin of Spanish Studies, vol 94:2017 "Through meticulous research, Christine Arkinstall has proven that women thinkers and activists did not disappear from the Spanish intellectual landscape in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In Spanish Female Writers and the Freethinking Press, she weaves a fascinating account of these women's lives, writings, and public activities.
The style is fluid, accessible, and graceful - a great pleasure to read."--Roberta Johnson, Emerita, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, University of Kansas "Spanish Female Writers and the Freethinking Presscompletely explodes a complacent understanding of fin de sigloSpanish society and literature derived from reading the canon and unquestioningly accepting received ideas and opinions. This is an exciting, revolutionary work."--Maryellen Bieder, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, Indiana University-Bloomington.