Rule Britannia: Women, Empire, and Victorian Writing

Передня обкладинка
Cornell University Press, 1995 - 234 стор.

Deirdre David here explores women's role in the literature of the colonial and imperial British nation, both as writers and as subjects of representation.

David's inquiry juxtaposes the parliamentary speeches of Thomas Macaulay and the private letters of Emily Eden, a trial in Calcutta and the missionary literature of Victorian women, writing about thuggee and emigration to Australia. David shows how, in these texts and in novels such as Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre, Charles Dickens's Dombey and Son, Wilkie Collins's Moonstone, and H. Rider Haggard's She, the historical and symbolic roles of Victorian women were linked to the British enterprise abroad.

Rule Britannia traces this connection from the early nineteenth-century nostalgia for masculine adventure to later patriarchal anxieties about female cultural assertiveness. Missionary, governess, and moral ideal, promoting sacrifice for the good of the empire--such figures come into sharp relief as David discusses debates over English education in India, class conflicts sparked by colonization, and patriarchal responses to fears about feminism and race degeneration. In conclusion, she reveals how Victorian women, as writers and symbols of colonization, served as critics of empire.

 

Зміст

INTRODUCTION
1
CHAPTER
17
CHAPTER
43
CHAPTER THREE
77

Інші видання - Показати все

Загальні терміни та фрази

Посилання на книгу

The Erotics of Talk: Women's Writing and Feminist Paradigms
Carla Kaplan
Обмежений попередній перегляд - 1996
Dickens the Journalist
John Drew
Попередній перегляд недоступний - 2003
Усі результати пошуку книг »

Про автора (1995)

Deirdre David is Professor of English at Temple University. She is the author of Intellectual Women and Victorian Patriarchy: Harriet Martineau, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, George Eliot, also from Cornell, and associate editor of The Columbia History of the British Novel.

Бібліографічна інформація