| I. |
About the Author |
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| II. |
Overview |
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| III. |
Setting |
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| IV. |
Themes and Characters |
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| V. |
Literary Qualities |
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| VI. |
Social Sensitivity |
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| VII. |
Topics for Discussion |
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| VIII. |
Ideas for Reports and Papers |
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| IX. |
Related Titles |
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Literature Guide - Little Women
Alcott, Louisa May Published 1868-1869
I About the Author
Louisa May Alcott was born on November 29, 1832, in Germantown, Pennsylvania, where her father, Bronson Alcotta transcendentalist philosopher and an educatordirected a school for small children. Bronson later founded the Temple School in Boston, but public opposition to his radical methods and a declining enrollment forced him to close the school and incur a large debt. Suffering financially, the Alcotts eventually moved to Concord, Massachusetts, where Bronson tried to support the family by farming a small piece of land. This endeavor, too, failed. When Bronson became ill and suffered a nervous breakdown, Alcott assumed various domestic jobs, took in sewing, and ran a small school to provide financial support for her mother, Abigail, and the rest of the family. An advocate of women's rights, Alcott remained unmarried in an age when marriage and motherhood were considered the central events of a woman's life, and achieved such a degree of literary success that she was able to pay off the family's huge debt with royalties from her writing. ...
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