{"isbn_13": ["9780252010163"], "physical_format": "Paperback", "subtitle": "Feminist Criticism of Shakespeare", "weight": "1.3 pounds", "languages": [{"key": "/l/eng"}], "type": {"key": "/type/edition"}, "publishers": ["University of Illinois Press"], "number_of_pages": 360, "id": 12829437, "first_sentence": {"type": "/type/text", "value": "Despite all the ink spilled on inventing fanciful histories for Falstaff with Mowbray, Hamlet at Wittenberg, and the like, it is Shakespeare's women, rather than his men, who have most consistently moved his readers to a peculiarly cloying, gossipy condescension."}, "isbn_10": ["0252010167"], "publish_date": "May 1, 1984", "key": "/b/OL9530219M", "last_modified": {"type": "/type/datetime", "value": "2008-04-30 09:38:13.731961"}, "title": "WOMENS PART: FEMINIST CRI", "contributions": ["Carolyn Lenz (Editor)", "Gayle Greene (Editor)", "Carol Neely (Editor)"], "subjects": ["Feminism", "Shakespeare studies & criticism", "Shakespeare", "Literary Criticism / Shakespeare", "Women In Literature", "Literature - Classics / Criticism", "English"], "physical_dimensions": "8.8 x 6 x 0.9 inches", "revision": 1}