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Women's Authorship and Editorship in Victorian Culture
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 217

Women's Authorship and Editorship in Victorian Culture

This book brings new perspectives to the study of sensation fiction in the Victorian period. It examines Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Ellen Wood, and Florence Marryat's magazines alongside their fiction to explore the self-conscious and complex ways they used sensation to re-work contemporary notions of female agency.

The Social Life of Criticism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 249

The Social Life of Criticism

Contends that gender politics were influential in the early development of literary criticism and the writings of female critics

Working-Class Women Poets in Victorian Britain
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 365

Working-Class Women Poets in Victorian Britain

Though working-class women in the nineteenth century included many accomplished and prolific poets, their work has often been neglected by critics and readers in favour of comparable work by men. Questioning the assumption that few poems by working-class women had survived, Florence Boos set out to discover supposedly lost works in libraries, private collections, and archives. Her years of research resulted in this anthology. Working-Class Women Poets in Victorian Britain features poetry from a variety of women, including an itinerant weaver, a rural midwife, a factory worker protesting industrialization, and a blind Scottish poet who wrote in both the Scots dialect and English. In addition to biographical information and contemporary reviews of the poets’ work, the anthology also includes several photographs of the poets, their environment, and the journals in which their poems appeared.

Women Reviewing Women in Nineteenth-Century Britain
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 194

Women Reviewing Women in Nineteenth-Century Britain

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2016-02-17
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  • Publisher: Routledge

Focusing particularly on the critical reception of Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë and George Eliot, Joanne Wilkes offers in-depth examinations of reviews by eight female critics: Maria Jane Jewsbury, Sara Coleridge, Hannah Lawrance, Jane Williams, Julia Kavanagh, Anne Mozley, Margaret Oliphant and Mary Augusta Ward. What they wrote about women writers, and what their writings tell us about the critics' own sense of themselves as women writers, reveal the distinctive character of nineteenth-century women's contributions to literary history. Wilkes explores the different choices these critics, writing when women had to grapple with limiting assumptions about female intellectual capacities, mad...

W.H. Auden Encyclopedia
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 305

W.H. Auden Encyclopedia

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2015-05-07
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  • Publisher: McFarland

W.H. Auden's life and work were perhaps best explained and condensed in the words of Edward Mendelson, Auden's literary executor, when he remarked, "[Auden] grew up in a household in which the scientific inquiries of his father maintained an uneasy truce with the ritualized religion of his mother." Indeed, science and religion were dominant themes in Auden's life and work, which for him were oftentimes one and the same. Auden was hailed as the new T.S. Eliot and as the "coming" man, greatly influencing the future generations of angry young men with his thoughts on science, religion, and the relationship between the two. This book is an exhaustive reference to W.H. Auden. Those new to Auden a...

London Voices, 1820–1840
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 300

London Voices, 1820–1840

London, 1820. The British capital is a metropolis that overwhelms dwellers and visitors alike with constant exposure to all kinds of sensory stimulation. Over the next two decades, the city’s tumult will reach new heights: as population expansion places different classes in dangerous proximity and ideas of political and social reform linger in the air, London begins to undergo enormous infrastructure change that will alter it forever. It is the London of this period that editors Roger Parker and Susan Rutherford pinpoint in this book, which chooses one broad musical category—voice—and engages with it through essays on music of the streets, theaters, opera houses, and concert halls; on ...

Reading Gertrude Stein
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 291

Reading Gertrude Stein

Reading Gertrude Stein traces the evolution of the mind and art of Gertrude Stein from Three Lives through The Making of Americans to Tender Buttons. In a series of close readings, Lisa Ruddick shows how Stein, whom she regards as the first truly modern writer in English, absorbed the influence of several of the major thinkers of her day (particularly William James and Freud), and then developed unique perspectives of her own original language and culture.

British Women Writers and the Short Story, 1850-1930
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 270

British Women Writers and the Short Story, 1850-1930

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014-03-30
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  • Publisher: Springer

This book addresses a critically neglected genre used by women writers from Gaskell to Woolf to complicate Victorian and modernist notions of gender and social space. Their innovative short stories ask Britons to reconsider where women could live, how they could be identified, and whether they could be contained.

Lady Audley's Secret
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 439

Lady Audley's Secret

When beautiful Lucy Graham becomes Lady Audley, her future looks secure. But her past is shrouded in mystery, and the disappearance of a young man sparks an investigation that will reveal her dark secret... This new edition explores the novel in the context of nineteenth-century sensation fiction and the lively debates it provoked.

Frances Power Cobbe and Victorian Feminism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 207

Frances Power Cobbe and Victorian Feminism

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2006-04-04
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  • Publisher: Springer

This new book asks a key question- what did it mean to have a Victorian feminist write for an established newspaper or periodical? Using the example of Frances Power Cobbe, it focuses on Victorian feminism and its political workings, and urges us to reconsider what feminism looked like in the nineteenth-century.