Public and Private: Gender, Class, and the British Novel (1764-1878)U of Minnesota Press, 1997 - 243 páginas This groundbreaking work examines the emergent and fluctuating relationship between the public and private social spheres of the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. By assessing novels such as Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and Jane Austen's Emma through the lens of the social theories of Jurgen Habermas and Michel Foucault, Patricia McKee presents a fresh and highly original contribution to literary studies. |
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... Hardy's novels , the reproductivity of social production eventually be- comes its fixed character , largely because Hardy depicts reproductivity as natural . Whereas Dickens insists that the capacity of modern knowl- edge to do little ...
... Hardy's novels , the reproductivity of social production eventually be- comes its fixed character , largely because Hardy depicts reproductivity as natural . Whereas Dickens insists that the capacity of modern knowl- edge to do little ...
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... Hardy , represent obscurity cultivated together with knowledge , even by knowledge , and despite human interests and action . When the lives of women are iden- tified as unknowable , therefore , they fit into a certain place in ...
... Hardy , represent obscurity cultivated together with knowledge , even by knowledge , and despite human interests and action . When the lives of women are iden- tified as unknowable , therefore , they fit into a certain place in ...
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Contenido
Emma and Frankenstein | 47 |
Public Knowledge Common Knowledge | 113 |
East Lynne | 152 |
Conclusion | 219 |
Index | 239 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Public and Private: Gender, Class, and the British Novel (1764-1878) Patricia McKee Vista previa limitada - 1997 |
Public and Private: Gender, Class, and the British Novel (1764-1878) Patricia McKee Sin vista previa disponible - 1997 |
Public and Private: Gender, Class, and the British Novel (1764-1878) Patricia McKee Sin vista previa disponible - 1997 |
Términos y frases comunes
appear Archibald argues Austen Barbara Barchester Towers becomes behavior body bureaucratic Castle of Otranto characters Clym common conflict confusion consumer cultivation culture debate depiction depths Dick Dickens Dickens's differentiation Diggory discrimination dispersed displacement distinction East Lynne Egdon Heath eighteenth century Emma emotional Eustacia exchange experience external feelings female Foucault Frank Frank Churchill Frankenstein gender gentlemen Gothic novel Grantly Habermas Hardy Harriet heath Henry Wood human humiliation Humphry Clinker identifies identity images imagination individual innocent interests internal Isabel Isabella Jürgen Habermas kind Knightley knowledge Levison Little Dorrit lower class male means Michel Foucault Moreover natural Nell's nineteenth century novel obscurity occurs Old Curiosity Old Curiosity Shop persons political produce Proudie public and private public sphere Quilp rational recognized relations representation represented reproduction scene seems sense Slope Smollett space spatial surfaces Theodore things tion Trollope University Press Walpole Whereas woman women