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 97
The umbrageous landscape , Nature gorged on its green self , is , in The
Woodlanders , as Goode puts it , ' the site of the historical struggles of men and
not a shelter from them ' ( p . 109 ) : but where are women to be sited in this
formulation ?
The umbrageous landscape , Nature gorged on its green self , is , in The
Woodlanders , as Goode puts it , ' the site of the historical struggles of men and
not a shelter from them ' ( p . 109 ) : but where are women to be sited in this
formulation ?
Page 98
Picturesque landscape , which , as Martin Price remarked , ' seeks a tension
between the disorderly . . . and the ... The social upheaval that ensued - in short ,
dispossession – was paralleled in the landscape not by spatial disorder but by
the ...
Picturesque landscape , which , as Martin Price remarked , ' seeks a tension
between the disorderly . . . and the ... The social upheaval that ensued - in short ,
dispossession – was paralleled in the landscape not by spatial disorder but by
the ...
Page 100
The transport of goods and passengers south from Bristol is now the business of
the railway , the means by which the rural landscape was opened up to the
metropolitan Victorians , the readers of The Woodlanders . The railway is passing
on ...
The transport of goods and passengers south from Bristol is now the business of
the railway , the means by which the rural landscape was opened up to the
metropolitan Victorians , the readers of The Woodlanders . The railway is passing
on ...
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