British Women's Writing from Brontë to Bloomsbury, Volume 2 1860s and 1870s /
| 企业作者: | |
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| 其他作者: | , |
| 总结: | XXVI, 291 p. 3 illus. text |
| 语言: | 英语 |
| 出版: |
Cham :
Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,
2020.
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| 版: | 1st ed. 2020. |
| 丛编: | British Women's Writing from Brontë to Bloomsbury, 1840–1940,
2 |
| 主题: | |
| 在线阅读: | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-38528-6 |
| 格式: | 电子 图书 |
书本目录:
- 1.Introduction; Adrienne E. Gavin and Carolyn W. de la L. Oulton
- 2. A Decade of Experiment: George Eliot in the 1860s; Margaret Harris
- 3. ‘Duck him!’: Private Feelings, Public Interests, and Ellen Wood’s East Lynne; Tara MacDonald
- 4. [Tr]ains of Circumstantial Evidence: Railway ‘Monomania’ and Investigations of Gender in Lady Audley’s Secret; Andrew F. Humphries
- 5. ‘There is great need for forgiveness in this world': The Call for Reconciliation in Elizabeth Gaskell’s Sylvia’s Lovers and A Dark Night’s Work; Elizabeth Ludlow
- 6. ‘The plain duties which are set before me’: Charity, Agency, and Women’s Work in the 1860s; Kristine Moruzi
- 7.‘[S]mothered under rose-leaves’: Violent Sensation and the Location of the Feminine in Eliza Lynn Linton’s Sowing the Wind; Carolyn W. de la L. Oulton
- 8. ‘Fleshly Inclinations’: The Nature of Female Desire in Rhoda Broughton’s Early Fiction; Tamar Heller
- 9. Crumbs from the Table: Matilda Betham-Edwards’ Comic Writing in Punch; Clare Horrocks and Nickianne Moody
- 10. Transcending Prudence: Charlotte Riddell’s ‘City Women’; Silvana Colella
- 11. ‘[M]ute orations, mute rhapsodies, mute discussions’: Silence in George Eliot’s Last Decade; Fionnuala Dillane
- 12.‘His eyes commanded me to come to him’: Desire and Mesmerism in Rhoda Broughton’s ‘The Man with the Nose’; Melissa Purdue
- 13. ‘[E]mphatically un-literary and middle-classʼ: Undressing Middle-Class Anxieties in Ellen Wood’s Johnny Ludlow Stories; Alyson Hunt
- 14. ‘Sinecures which could be held by girls’: Margaret Oliphant and Women’s Labour; Danielle Charette
- 15. ‘More like a woman stuck into boy’s clothes’: Transcendent Femininity in Florence Marryat’sHer Father’s Name; Catherine Pope
- 16. ‘I am writing the life of a horse’: Anna Sewell’s Black Beauty in the 1870s; Adrienne E. Gavin
- 17. Forging a New Path: Fraud and White-Collar Crime in Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s 1870s Fiction; Janine Hatter. .