Legacy, Volume 4-5Department of English, University of Massachusetts, 1987 |
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Halaman 49
... novel as a genre ( it was politically revolutionary ) , and concludes with a chap- ter on who read novels , and why . ( Men , for example , read sentimental fiction as a matter of course , and women , who were excluded from formal ...
... novel as a genre ( it was politically revolutionary ) , and concludes with a chap- ter on who read novels , and why . ( Men , for example , read sentimental fiction as a matter of course , and women , who were excluded from formal ...
Halaman 23
... novel by Frances Gage , Elsie Magoon , the first of Gage's postwar novels and perhaps the most ambitious of them in terms of generic experimentation . The novel is at once a temperance tract and an historical novel of settlement ...
... novel by Frances Gage , Elsie Magoon , the first of Gage's postwar novels and perhaps the most ambitious of them in terms of generic experimentation . The novel is at once a temperance tract and an historical novel of settlement ...
Halaman 71
... novel , as in her others , women are abandoned , in- carcerated , impoverished , threatened , misled , and trivialized by their putative male protectors . In addition , the novel well displays Southworth's literary style , known for its ...
... novel , as in her others , women are abandoned , in- carcerated , impoverished , threatened , misled , and trivialized by their putative male protectors . In addition , the novel well displays Southworth's literary style , known for its ...
Isi
Editors Note | 2 |
Miss Grief by Constance Fenimore Woolson | 11 |
Mary E Wilkins Freeman 18521930 Leah Blatt Glasser | 37 |
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Affiliation Afro-American Alcott Alice American Literature American Women Writers Anna authors black women Boston Brown Catharine Maria Sedgwick century College Cooper critical cultural Dept domestic Edith Wharton Elsie Magoon Emily Dickinson England English essay Fanny father female feminist fiction Frances Frances Harper friends Gage's Gail Hamilton gender genre Gilman girl Gothic Hagar Harper Harriet Beecher Stowe heroine husband Jacobs James Journal Kate LEGACY Letters Library literary lives Louisa Lydia Maria Child Lydia Sigourney male marriage Mary Wilkins Freeman Massachusetts ment metaphor Miss Grief mother narrative narrator nineteenth nineteenth-century American novel paper poem poet poetess poetic poetry political Progress Publications published Quarterly readers Romance Rose Terry Cooke Sarah Orne Jewett Sigourney Sigourney's sion sketch slave social Southworth subversion Susan Warner tion tradition Uncle Tom's Cabin Univ University Voice Wallpaper Wilkins Freeman Willa Cather woman Women's Studies York