Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Youth lit writers

Index Key: Wikidata list (WD) / Crowd-sourced list (CS)

Writers by occupation: Writers (CS) Art critics (WD) Art historians (WD) Authors (WD) Children's writers (WD) Columnists (WD) Critics (WD) Editors (WD) Essayists (WD) French speaking African authors (CS) Historians (WD) Journalists (CS) Journalists (WD) Novelists (CS) Novelists (WD) Playwrights (CS) Playwrights (WD) Poets (CS) Poets #1 (WD) Poets #2 (WD) Publishers (WD) Screenwriters (WD) Songwriters (WD) Translators (WD) Writers (WD) Youth lit writers (CS)

Writers (WD) by country: Argentina Austria Belgium Brazil British India Canada Czech Republic Finland France Germany India Israel Italy Japan Netherlands Norway Poland Russia Slovenia Spain Sweden Switzerland UK Uruguay


WiR redlist index: Youth lit writers


Welcome to WikiProject Women in Red (WiR). Our objective is to turn red links into blue ones. Our scope is women's biographies, women's works, and women's issues, broadly construed.

This list of red links is intended to serve as a basis for creating new articles on the English Wikipedia. Please note however that the red links on this list may well not be suitable as the basis for an article. All new articles must satisfy Wikipedia's notability criteria with reliable independent sources.

Women in Red logo

  • This is a list under development of missing articles on women who are (or have been) notable for their works as writers for children and young adults.

Angola

edit

Argentina

edit

Brazil

edit

Bulgaria

edit

Canada

edit
  • Janet Isabel Carruthers (born 1894) Canadian teacher and children's writer. Carruthers taught in a school for Native Americans in the Canadian bushland of North Ontario.

Germany

edit

Nigeria

edit

Russia/USSR

edit

South Africa

edit

Sweden

edit

Switzerland

edit

United Kingdom

edit

United States

edit

Talkpage templates for articles

edit
  • If the woman was born before 1950 use: {{WikiProject Women's history}}
  • If the woman was born after 1950 use: {{WikiProject Women}}
  • Add to WikiProject Children's literature use:{{WikiProject Children's literature |class= |importance= |needs-infobox= |incomp-infobox= |needs-infobox-cover= |past-selected-article-bio= }}
  • Add to WikiProject Women writers:{{WPWW}}

References

edit
  1. ^ Katharina M. Wilson (1991). An Encyclopedia of Continental Women Writers. Taylor & Francis. p. 588. ISBN 978-0-8240-8547-6.
  2. ^ Phillips, Zlata Fuss (2001). German Children's and Youth Literature in Exile 1933-1950: Biographies and Bibliographies. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 88–93. ISBN 978-3-11-095285-8.
  3. ^ Rosemary Auchmuty; Robert J. Kirkpatrick; Joy Wotton, eds. (2000). The encyclopaedia of boy's school stories. Ashgate. p. 171.