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  1. Changing the Victorian Subject
    Contributor: Tonkin, Maggie (Publisher); Treagus, Mandy (Publisher); Seys, Madeleine (Publisher); Crozier-De Rosa, Sharon (Publisher)
    Published: 2014
    Publisher:  University of Adelaide Press

    The essays in this collection examine how both colonial and British authors engage with Victorian subjects and subjectivities in their work. Some essays explore the emergence of a key trope within colonial texts: the negotiation of Victorian and... more

     

    The essays in this collection examine how both colonial and British authors engage with Victorian subjects and subjectivities in their work. Some essays explore the emergence of a key trope within colonial texts: the negotiation of Victorian and settler-subject positions. Others argue for new readings of key metropolitan texts and their repositioning within literary history. These essays work to recognise the plurality of the rubric of the 'Victorian' and to expand how the category of Victorian studies can be understood.

     

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    Source: OAPEN
    Contributor: Tonkin, Maggie (Publisher); Treagus, Mandy (Publisher); Seys, Madeleine (Publisher); Crozier-De Rosa, Sharon (Publisher)
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    Other identifier:
    Subjects: Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900
    Other subjects: australian literature; south-african literature; victorian subject; post-colonial; colonial; canadian literature; Barrie; Division of Braddon (state); Lesbian; Olive Schreiner
    Scope: 1 electronic resource (292 p.)
  2. Critical Alliances
    Economics and Feminism in English Women's Writing, 1880-1914
    Published: [2020]; 2020
    Publisher:  University of Toronto Press, Toronto

    Critical Alliances argues that late-Victorian and modernist feminist authors saw in literary representations of female collaboration an opportunity to produce new gender and economic roles for women. It is not often that one thinks of female... more

     

    Critical Alliances argues that late-Victorian and modernist feminist authors saw in literary representations of female collaboration an opportunity to produce new gender and economic roles for women. It is not often that one thinks of female allegiances - such as kinship networks, cultural inheritance, or lesbian marriage - as influencing the marketplace; nor does one often think of economic models when theorizing feminist cooperation. S. Brooke Cameron suggest that, through their representations of female partnership, feminist authors such as Virginia Woolf, Olive Schreiner, George Egerton, Amy Levy, and Michael Field redefined the gendered marketplace and, with it, women's professional opportunities. Interdisciplinary at its core and using a contextual approach, Critical Alliances selects cultural texts and theories relevant to each writer's particular intervention in the marketplace. Chapters look at how different forms of feminist collaboration enabled women to stake their claim to one of the many, emergent professions at the turn of the century

     

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