The Captured World: The Child and Childhood in Nineteenth-century Women's Writing in EnglandHarvester Wheatsheaf, 1993 - 222 páginas |
Contenido
The child of reason | 12 |
The child of faith | 40 |
The exploited child | 62 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 5 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
adult appear attitudes autobiography awareness becomes behaviour Beth Beth's Brontë brother Catherine character Charlotte Charlotte Brontë Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna Charlotte Yonge child childish contemporary contrast Cowan Bridge death depiction despite Dickens didactic domestic early Edgeworth effects Elizabeth Elizabeth Gaskell Emily Brontë emotional Evangelical evokes example eyes fact Fairchild father fear feels fiction George Eliot girls Harriet Martineau Heathcliff Hesba Stretton Ibid idealised imagination influence innocence Jane Jane Eyre Jane's Juliana Ewing literary literature lives London Maggie Maggie's male Maria Edgeworth Marner Mary Ministering Children moral mother narrative narrator nature nineteenth century novel orphan parents poor portrayal of childhood portrayed protagonist relationship religious response reveal role Sarah Sarah Trimmer scene seen sense sentimentality Sewell Sherwood sister social spiritual stereotypes story Stretton suffering tale Tonna tract Trollope upbringing Victorian women writers Wuthering Heights Yonge