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British Women's Writing from Brontë to Bloomsbury, Volume 1

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Cover of 'British Women's Writing from Brontë to Bloomsbury, Volume 1'

Table of Contents

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    Book Overview
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    Chapter 1 Introduction
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    Chapter 2 ‘Pleasant, easy work, -& not useless, I hope’: Harriet Martineau as a Children’s Writer of the 1840s
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    Chapter 3 ‘Powerful beyond all question’: Catherine Crowe’s Novels of the 1840s
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    Chapter 4 Women in Service: Private Lives and Labour in Mary Howitt’s Work and Wages
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    Chapter 5 Confronting the 1840s: Christian Johnstone in Criticism and Fiction
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    Chapter 6 Jane Eyre, Orphan Governess: Narrating Victorian Vulnerability and Social Change
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    Chapter 7 ‘I was in the condition of mind to be shocked at nothing’: Losing the Plot in Wuthering Heights
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    Chapter 8 Anne Brontë: An Unlikely Subversive
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    Chapter 9 The Female Voice and Industrial Fiction: Elizabeth Gaskell’s Mary Barton
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    Chapter 10 The Age of the Female Novelist: Single Women as Authors of Fiction
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    Chapter 11 ‘Excluded from a woman’s natural destiny’: Disability and Femininity in Dinah Mulock’s Olive and Charlotte M. Yonge’s The Daisy Chain
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    Chapter 12 ‘The eatables were of the slightest description’: Consumption and Consumerism in Cranford
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    Chapter 13 ‘There never was a mistress whose rule was milder’: Sadomasochism and Female Identity in Charlotte Brontë’s Villette
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    Chapter 14 Cultivating King Arthur: Women Writers and Arthurian Romance in the 1850s
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    Chapter 15 ‘[T]he work of a she-devil’: Sensation Fiction, Crime Writing, and Caroline Clive’s Paul Ferroll
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    Chapter 16 ‘[Your novel] quite gives me a pain in the stomach’: How Paternal Disapproval Ended Julia Wedgwood’s Promising Career as a Novelist
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    Chapter 17 Adam Bede and ‘the green trash of the railway stall’: George Eliot and the Lady Novelists of 1859
Attention for Chapter 11: ‘Excluded from a woman’s natural destiny’: Disability and Femininity in Dinah Mulock’s Olive and Charlotte M. Yonge’s The Daisy Chain
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Chapter title
‘Excluded from a woman’s natural destiny’: Disability and Femininity in Dinah Mulock’s Olive and Charlotte M. Yonge’s The Daisy Chain
Chapter number 11
Book title
British Women's Writing from Brontë to Bloomsbury, Volume 1
Published by
Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, January 2018
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-78226-3_11
Book ISBNs
978-3-31-978225-6, 978-3-31-978226-3
Authors

Clare Walker Gore