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 40
... characters , using them to make the norms of the implicit author clear . Such a device can be assumed whenever a character expresses views also held by Oliphant in her non - fiction , or shown to be " correct " by other codes in the ...
... characters , using them to make the norms of the implicit author clear . Such a device can be assumed whenever a character expresses views also held by Oliphant in her non - fiction , or shown to be " correct " by other codes in the ...
Página 118
... characters . The ladies of polite society remain colourless and insipid in Scottish as in English novels . Oliphant , for 8 See Oliphant's " Scottish National Character " , Blackwood's , 87 ( 1860 ) , 722. Cf. also Hart , 403 . her part ...
... characters . The ladies of polite society remain colourless and insipid in Scottish as in English novels . Oliphant , for 8 See Oliphant's " Scottish National Character " , Blackwood's , 87 ( 1860 ) , 722. Cf. also Hart , 403 . her part ...
Página 125
... characters . Her down- to - earth philosophy enables her , like her heroines , to accept what is imperfect in life , indeed , to see it as what is natural and human . Her criticism of Eliot gives us insight into her radically different ...
... characters . Her down- to - earth philosophy enables her , like her heroines , to accept what is imperfect in life , indeed , to see it as what is natural and human . Her criticism of Eliot gives us insight into her radically different ...
Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
FORMAL CONSIDERATIONS | 17 |
17 | 51 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 6 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
Autobiography and Letters Beleaguered City Blackwood's Carlingford characterisation characters Church clichés Colby contemporaries Country Gentleman critics Cuckoo Curate in Charge daughter depiction despite Diana Trelawny Dickens Dissenters Doctor's Family Eliot Equivocal Virtue father feel female figures George Eliot ghost stories girl hero heroine House Divided husband idealised ironic John Drayton Junior Kirsteen Ladies Lindores Lady Car Leavis Lilliesleaf literary London Lucilla male Margaret Maitland Margaret Oliphant marriage Marriage of Elinor marry Mary Melvilles Merkland Minister's Wife Miss Marjoribanks mother motifs naive narrative narrator never Nonconformist oeuvre Oliphant's fiction Oliphant's novels Patty Perpetual Curate Phoebe plot poor Portrait presentation protagonist Q. D. Leavis Railwayman reader Rector religious role romantic romantic love Rose in June Salem Chapel Saturday Review Scottish sentimental Showalter social Spectator Stock Clarke sympathy Three Brothers traditional Tredgold Trollope typical Victorian fiction Victorian novel Williams woman women writers young