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WOMEN'S IMAGES AND THEIR EDUCATIONAL IMPORTANCE IN ENGLISH AND UZBEK LITERATURE OF THE 20TH CENTURY

Hilola Uktamovna YusupovaAssociate professor at Bukhara State Technical Institute
ABI

Abstract

This article investigates women’s images and their educational importance in twentieth-century English and Uzbek literature through a comparative lens. It asks how literary representations of women operate as informal pedagogies that cultivate ethical judgment, gendered self-understanding, and notions of agency in readers. The study integrates comparative close reading with feminist narratology and reception-oriented analysis, drawing on selected English modernist and postwar texts and Uzbek prose and poetry shaped by modernization and late-Soviet cultural frameworks. The article’s novelty is an integrative typology of women’s images as educational agents: moral witnesses, custodians of memory, laboring subjects, and pedagogical mediators within family and community. Findings show that women’s portrayals do not simply mirror social transformations; they actively educate by distributing narrative authority, organizing symbolic value, and enabling affective identification.

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