The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women
Overview
Edited by literary scholars Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar — co-authors of the influential feminist criticism study The Madwoman in the Attic — The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women was first published by W. W. Norton in 1985 as a direct response to how thoroughly women writers, including many significant poets, had been excluded or marginalized in standard anthologies like Palgrave's Golden Treasury and even the general Norton Anthology of Poetry.
Contents and Scope
The anthology spans centuries of women's literary output in English, including poetry, fiction, and non-fiction prose, deliberately reaching beyond the small handful of women poets (Dickinson, Barrett Browning, a few others) who had achieved canonical status in mixed-gender anthologies. It includes work by women from diverse racial, ethnic, socioeconomic, religious, and sexual backgrounds, expanding significantly with each edition.
Historical Significance
The anthology emerged from the broader feminist literary recovery project of the 1970s and 1980s, which sought to identify, republish, and critically re-evaluate women writers whose work had gone out of print or been excluded from academic study. Where anthologies like Palgrave's Golden Treasury included "only a handful" of women poets across all editions, Gilbert and Gubar's collection made women's authorship — not a subordinate category within a mixed canon — the entire organizing principle.
Ongoing Relevance
Poetry anthologies remain a documented site of gender imbalance; controversies over "all-male" or heavily male-skewed anthologies have continued into the 2010s and 2020s, prompting boycotts and public criticism from women writers. The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women continues to serve as both a corrective historical resource and a standing rebuke to anthologies that fail to represent women poets proportionally.
Legacy
Now in its third edition (2007), the anthology remains a standard text in women's studies and literature courses, and represents a broader category of corrective, identity-centered anthologies — alongside collections of Black, Indigenous, LGBTQ+, and non-Western poets — that emerged specifically to counteract exclusion from earlier canon-defining collections.
Related Anthologies
Palgrave's Golden Treasury, Emily Dickinson's Posthumous Collections
Frequently Asked Questions
Last updated: 2026-07-01