Outside the Pale : Cultural Exclusion, Gender Difference, and the Victorian Woman Writer /
"In his 1850 article "Prostitution," W.R. Greg asserts that nineteenth-century society conceived of prostitutes as "far more out of the pale of humanity than negroes on a slave plantation or fellahs in a Pasha's dungeon." Elsie B. Michie here provides insightful reading...
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Format: | Électronique eBook |
Langue: | Inglés |
Publié: |
Ithaca :
Cornell University Press,
1993.
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Collection: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Sujets: | |
Accès en ligne: | Texto completo |
Table des matières:
- "Matters That Appertain to the Imagination": Accounting for Production in Frankenstein
- "The Yahoo, Not the Demon": Heathcliff, Rochester, and the Simianization of the Irish
- "My Story as My Own Property": Gaskell, Dickens, and the Rhetoric of Prostitution
- "Those That Will Not Work": Prostitutes, Property, Gaskell, and Dickens
- "High Art and Science Always Require the Whole Man": Culture and Menstruation in Middlemarch.