Herland is Charlotte Perkins Gilman's 1915 feminist utopian novel about an isolated society composed entirely of women; free of war, conflict, and domination. It's narrated by a sociology student who, along with two friends, discovers the society, testing their own stereotypes. Gilman wrote the novel in the midst of World War I. It first appeared as a serial in her magazine, The Forerunner between 1909-1916. It did not appear in book form until 1979.
Featured in our collection of World War I Literature
Chapter 1: A Not Unnatural Enterprise
Chapter 3: A Peculiar Imprisonment
Chapter 6: Comparisons Are Odious
Chapter 7: Our Growing Modesty
Chapter 8: The Girls of Herland
Chapter 9: Our Relations and Theirs
Chapter 10: Their Religions and Our Marriages