"Heaven and Home": Charlotte M. Yonge's Domestic Fiction and the Victorian Debate Over WomenEnglish Literary Studies, University of Victoria, 1995 - 125 sider |
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Resultat 1-3 av 16
Side 44
... interest in the reforms of Tractarian activists like Woodard ; in The Trial the school is eventually reformed by a new headmaster who had been trained by experience as an under - master “ at one of the great schools recently opened for ...
... interest in the reforms of Tractarian activists like Woodard ; in The Trial the school is eventually reformed by a new headmaster who had been trained by experience as an under - master “ at one of the great schools recently opened for ...
Side 69
... interest in dedicated working women , her lifelong Tractarianism and some first hand knowledge of the life of a sisterhood , Yonge shows comparatively little imaginative involvement with convent life . This fact perhaps indicates ...
... interest in dedicated working women , her lifelong Tractarianism and some first hand knowledge of the life of a sisterhood , Yonge shows comparatively little imaginative involvement with convent life . This fact perhaps indicates ...
Side 84
... interest in women's rights but because of their self - interest ; self - absorption is the essential fault against femininity in Yonge's fiction , and thus she equates true middle - class femininity in certain ways with Christian ...
... interest in women's rights but because of their self - interest ; self - absorption is the essential fault against femininity in Yonge's fiction , and thus she equates true middle - class femininity in certain ways with Christian ...
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
acceptable according active associated become beliefs brother cause chapter characters Charlotte Christian Church Clever Woman College common concern contemporary continued Daisy Chain daughter debate described discussion domestic effective employment energies especially essential established Ethel eventually fact father feel female feminine feminist fiction gender girls Heir of Redclyffe House husband important instance institutions interest involved issues Keble Keble's Lady later leads learning less lives London male marriage married middle-class moral mother movement narrative nature never novel Oxford period Pillars political position presented question Rachel reform relation relationship religious represented responsible role says sense shows sister sisterhoods social society sphere spiritual story success suffrage suggests teaching Three Brides tion Tractarian traditional values Victorian wife Womankind women writes Yonge Yonge's young
Referanser til denne boken
Victorian Crime, Madness and Sensation Andrew Maunder,Grace Moore Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2004 |