Legacy, Volume 5,Masalah 2Department of English, University of Massachusetts, 1989 |
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Halaman 12
... readers , have been ac- tivated during the poem . The sublime romantic epiphany here is not so much something that the reader watches the poetess experience as something that oc- curs in the lack of consistent distinctions between ...
... readers , have been ac- tivated during the poem . The sublime romantic epiphany here is not so much something that the reader watches the poetess experience as something that oc- curs in the lack of consistent distinctions between ...
Halaman 26
... readers for Elsie Magoon , is to subvert and subdue the expectations of readers attracted to other genres . Gage concentrates her polemical realism around the characterization of young Elsie . After a second gap of a few years in the ...
... readers for Elsie Magoon , is to subvert and subdue the expectations of readers attracted to other genres . Gage concentrates her polemical realism around the characterization of young Elsie . After a second gap of a few years in the ...
Halaman 29
... readers similarly cor- rupted by reading romances . Gage's subversion of popular genres like romance and domestic melodrama stems from her realization that her novel has to make its way in competition with others . If it is to sell ...
... readers similarly cor- rupted by reading romances . Gage's subversion of popular genres like romance and domestic melodrama stems from her realization that her novel has to make its way in competition with others . If it is to sell ...
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Metaphor | 3 |
The Postwar Fiction of Frances | 19 |
66 | 33 |
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Alcott American Literature American Studies American women writers Amy Post antislavery Baym Boston century Charlotte Perkins Culture daughter edition Elsie Magoon Elsie's Emily Dickinson essay father female feminist critics fiction Fuller Gage Gage's gender genres ghost Giant Wistaria Gilman Harriet Beecher Stowe Harriet Jacobs heroine History Hobomok husband ideology Jack Jacobs's Jenny Journal LEGACY letters Library literary Literary Realism lives Louisa Louisa May Alcott Lydia Maria Child Lydia Sigourney male Margaret Margaret Fuller Mary melodrama ment metaphor mother nature poems nineteenth nineteenth-century American women novel objectify paper poet poetess poetic poetry popular published Quarterly readers realism romantic lyric sentimental Sigourney Sigourney's sion Slave Girl Slave Narrative slavery Smithville social Southworth's Steps Upward still-house story Susan symbols temperance thou tion tradition Uncle Tom's Cabin University Vicinus voice waterfall Willa Cather woman Women's Studies writing Yellow Wallpaper York young Elsie