A feminist introduction to romanticism /
Elizabeth Fay's invaluable book addresses the reader in an immediate and direct manner to provide an unequaled introduction to the issues most important for feminist analyses of Romantic literature. In her opening chapter, Fay offers detailed definitions and a historicized grounding that gives...
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Format: | Printed Book |
Language: | English |
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Malden, Mass. :
Blackwell Publishers,
1998.
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Table of Contents:
- A feminist approach to romantic studies and the case of Austen. Standard definitions and revisions
- The historical period
- Feminist theory and romantic studies
- Jane Austen: a case study.
- Women and politics: writing revolution. Letters and the maternal: political metaphors
- Revolution as a frame of mind
- Revolutionary writing
- Maternal nationalism and children's literature.
- Women and the Gothic: literature as home politics. Defining the Gothic
- The Gothic as domestic: social critique Gothics. Psychological drama Gothics
- The romance of real life and radical critique.
- Women and thought: intellectual critique. The Bluestocking Circle in London
- Dissent and the rights of the home
- Women and history
- Literary criticism as art
- Intellectuality and the years of reaction.
- Women and identity: visuality in romantic texts. Seeing and seen: the writer and the proper lady
- Display and the specular heroine
- Tableaux vivants, theatrics and Burney's The Wanderer.