Another subgenre is feminist utopias and the overlapping category of feminist science fiction.
Marge Piercy: Woman On the Edge of Time (feminist utopia advocating complete equality between men and women)
Haug (1987) interprets daydreams as a specific, neglected feature of women's psychology, which have the potential to produce feminist utopias and other resistances.
Charlotte Perkins Gilman wrote Herland, an important early feminist utopia, and Virginia Woolf wrote Orlando.
It depicts a feminist utopia in which women run everything and men are secluded, in a mirror-image of the traditional practice of purdah.
Sadly, this book is handy for the uninspiring off-the-shelf university courses of feminist utopias.
According to Tineke Willemsen, "[a] feminist utopia would ... be the description of a place where at least women would like to live."
Wry fiction about a feminist new-age utopia.
There is a long tradition of female-only places in literature and mythology, starting with the Amazons and continuing into some examples of feminist utopias.