The Novels of Mrs. Oliphant: A Subversive View of Traditional ThemesP. Lang, 1994 - 343 páginas Margarete Oliphant (1828-1897) has long been decried as a conventional hack. This study shows that she was, in fact, an original and quite subversive writer, who radically re-interpreted traditional motifs and challenged values and ideals sacrosanct to the age. In her novels she turned upside down Victorian stereotypes of gender roles, marriage and family hierarchy, presented religious questions, death-bed scenes and the hereafter from a new and unconventional angle, and in her portrayal dispensed with models almost all of her contemporaries were content to follow. She deserves a permanent place in the gallery of nineteenth-century authors. |
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Página 90
... caused by the Industrial Revolution had not yet made an impact . It is characteristic of her to transport her stories a few decades back in time and to offer a nostalgic hindsight . The urban environment , the world of workers and ...
... caused by the Industrial Revolution had not yet made an impact . It is characteristic of her to transport her stories a few decades back in time and to offer a nostalgic hindsight . The urban environment , the world of workers and ...
Página 103
... caused problems of social acceptance.14 Like Phoebe , Patty is also " rewarded " with wealth and good fortune , and in return she es- chews the social status not becoming her . Oliphant applauds the fact that Patty voluntarily ...
... caused problems of social acceptance.14 Like Phoebe , Patty is also " rewarded " with wealth and good fortune , and in return she es- chews the social status not becoming her . Oliphant applauds the fact that Patty voluntarily ...
Página 126
A Subversive View of Traditional Themes Margarete Rubik. causes offence . At her soirées Lucilla Marjoribanks allows a chap- eron to accompany her and always wears a simple , high , white dress , whereas vain Barbara Lake causes the ...
A Subversive View of Traditional Themes Margarete Rubik. causes offence . At her soirées Lucilla Marjoribanks allows a chap- eron to accompany her and always wears a simple , high , white dress , whereas vain Barbara Lake causes the ...
Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
FORMAL CONSIDERATIONS | 17 |
17 | 51 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 6 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
able accept Autobiography and Letters Blackwood's Brothers called characters Church claims completely concerned considered contemporaries conventional course critics daughter death despite Eliot expected fact father feel female fiction figures frequently girl give hand happy heart heroine House human husband idea ideal interest ironic issues John Junior Lady less Letters literary living London look male Margaret marriage marry Mary means mind Miss Marjoribanks mother narrative narrator natural never novels Oliphant Oliphant's original Perpetual Curate Phoebe plot poor position presentation problems protagonist question reader refers regards religious remarkable role Salem Chapel Saturday Review scenes Scottish seems seen sense sentimental social Spectator stories thing thought Three traditional true turns typical understanding usually Victorian voice wife woman women writers young