![]() ![]() In 1967 French divorced her husband and enrolled in the English graduate program at Harvard University, receiving her Ph.D. Teaching English at the college from 1964 to 1968. ![]() French returned to Hofstra to earn her master's degree in 1964, while also ![]() French Jr., with whom she has two children. She received a bachelor's degree from Hofstra College (now Hofstra University) in Long Island in 1951. BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATIONįrench was born November 21, 1929, in New York City, to a poor family of Polish descent. While some critics denounce French's ideological fiction and nonfiction as polemical, her works are widely read and often examined in women's studies courses. A former homemaker whose academic aspirations led her to Harvard University during the politically turbulent 1960s, French draws upon her experiences with motherhood, divorce, academia, and political activism to evoke the concerns of women who rebel against domesticity, sexual submission, and discrimination in the workplace. Best known for her first novel, the highly popular The Women's Room (1977), French is an author of controversial works that provoke both enthusiastic and antagonistic responses from critical audiences. ![]()
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