The Feminine Irony: Women on Women in Early-nineteenth-century English LiteratureFairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1978 - 190 páginas |
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Página 110
... Perhaps it was easier to subscribe to society's attitudes than to fight them , or perhaps these more intelligent and creative women found it easier to identify with men . At any rate , Dr. Meryon explained that , during Stanhope's ...
... Perhaps it was easier to subscribe to society's attitudes than to fight them , or perhaps these more intelligent and creative women found it easier to identify with men . At any rate , Dr. Meryon explained that , during Stanhope's ...
Página 111
... Perhaps , then , what was most pathetic about Hester's later life was not her ill health or her shabby surroundings or her loss of wealth , but rather the fact that she could not have been a man , for only then could she perhaps have ...
... Perhaps , then , what was most pathetic about Hester's later life was not her ill health or her shabby surroundings or her loss of wealth , but rather the fact that she could not have been a man , for only then could she perhaps have ...
Página 119
... perhaps beyond the power of be- ing happy . Yet the strongest point of my ambition is to be every inch a woman . Delighted with the pages of La Voisier , I dropped the study of chemistry , though urged to it by a favourite friend and ...
... perhaps beyond the power of be- ing happy . Yet the strongest point of my ambition is to be every inch a woman . Delighted with the pages of La Voisier , I dropped the study of chemistry , though urged to it by a favourite friend and ...
Contenido
PREFACE | 9 |
Ladies of Labor and Ladies of Leisure | 21 |
To Scrub the Floor or Dance upon | 47 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 7 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Feminine Irony: Women on Women in Early-nineteenth-century English ... Lynne Agress Sin vista previa disponible - 1978 |
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Adeline Agnes Amelia Opie Ann Radcliffe Ann Taylor Anna Barbauld Belinda boys Broadhurst Castle Rackrent characters Charlotte child Cottagers Cottagers of Glenburnie critics Divorced domestic Dorothy Wordsworth early nineteenth century early-nineteenth-century educa Education of Daughters Elizabeth Hamilton Emily England English Novel Evelina explains Fanny Burney father female feminine Frankenstein Glenburnie Gothic novel Hannah More's heroine History husband Ibid Jane West Juliana Lady Howard learning Letters literary lives London Lord Howard male Maria Edgeworth marriage married Martha Butt Sherwood Mary Martha Butt Mary Russell Mitford Mary Wollstonecraft Memoirs middle middle-class women moral mother NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY never nonfiction poor praised published Quarterly Review readers religion religious role servants sister social society society's stereotype stories Strictures Susan Gray Sydney Owenson taught tion upper-class women Victorian Vindication virtues wife Wild Irish Girl wives women writers women's education working-class wrote York young ladies