Mistress of the House: Women of Property in the Victorian NovelThis exploration of gender and property ownership in eight important novels argues that property is a decisive undercurrent in narrative structures and modes, as well as an important gender signature in society and culture. Tim Dolin suggests that the formal development of nineteenth-century domestic fiction can only be understood in the context of changes in the theory and laws of property: indeed femininity and its representation cannot be considered separately from property relations and their reform. He presents original readings of novels in which a woman owns, acquires or loses property, focusing on exchanges between patriarchal cultural authority, the 'woman question' and narrative form, and on the place of domestic fiction in a culture in which property relations and gender relations are subject to radical review. Each chapter revolves around a representative text, but refers substantially to other material, both other novels and contemporary social, legal, political and feminist commentary. |
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Page 86
Thomas Hardy ' s fiction takes up the implications of these claims , introducing the
self - willed woman of property into the characteristic ' interplay between the
streetwalker and the homebody ' ( Langbauer , 1990 , p . 156 ) in the Victorian ...
Thomas Hardy ' s fiction takes up the implications of these claims , introducing the
self - willed woman of property into the characteristic ' interplay between the
streetwalker and the homebody ' ( Langbauer , 1990 , p . 156 ) in the Victorian ...
Page 91
The map of Hardy ' s Wessex appears at first to be just such a text : it clearly
distinguishes real and fictional names , but exploits the authority of cartography to
pretend that the dream - country ' really has ' solidified into a utilitarian region
which ...
The map of Hardy ' s Wessex appears at first to be just such a text : it clearly
distinguishes real and fictional names , but exploits the authority of cartography to
pretend that the dream - country ' really has ' solidified into a utilitarian region
which ...
Page 102
This fate points not to the casual destructiveness of overgrown nature , however ,
as Hardy ' s Darwinian rhetoric might lead us to think , but to the systemic
destructiveness of modern society . The Woodlanders guides its readers like lost
...
This fate points not to the casual destructiveness of overgrown nature , however ,
as Hardy ' s Darwinian rhetoric might lead us to think , but to the systemic
destructiveness of modern society . The Woodlanders guides its readers like lost
...
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