This study examines the emergence of the novel as a writing site for women writers and traces the ways in which women novelists between 1790 and 1820 represented space within their novels. It identifies how women used both the space afforded by the novel, and the representations of space in the novel, to enter the public sphere. Chapter 1 examines theories of the novel to show how it both reflects society and can become an agent for change in society. The chapter examines how important this was for women since the novel might enable them to establish a viewpoint that was distinct from the supposed universal viewpoint adopted by male society. The chapter also examines theories describing the growth of the public sphere, and explores how far ...
The dominant model of female authorship from 1690 to 1740 is London-centred, professional and fictio...
Reclaiming lost or forgotten (Victorian) popular women writers and their works is still an important...
Includes vita.[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT AUTHOR'S REQUEST.] Between 1790 an...
This dissertation examines the representation of spatiality in female adultery novels by women. I e...
This dissertation explores amatory fiction as a genre significant to English literary history. I gro...
This thesis explores the ways selected American women writers utilize spatial imagery to convey thei...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2014"Remodeling the Frauenzimmer: Women-Authored Spaces in...
The aim of this work is to map a correlation between gender and space in selected Victorian and Mode...
Interrogating two cases, Sealed Off and Miss Sophia’s Diary, this paper seeks to apply spatial narra...
This final-year essay aims to explore the contradictions that are present when we compare the texts ...
This study examines how British novels produced during the long nineteenth century, the period from ...
When Victorian fiction entered academic study in the mid-twentieth century, the texts that were cons...
Drawing from contemporary spatial theories, this dissertation examines how nineteenth-century women ...
This project examines the representation of architectural and metaphoric spaces in the works of four...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 88-101.Introduction -- Chapter 1: Gender, space and narrative...
The dominant model of female authorship from 1690 to 1740 is London-centred, professional and fictio...
Reclaiming lost or forgotten (Victorian) popular women writers and their works is still an important...
Includes vita.[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT AUTHOR'S REQUEST.] Between 1790 an...
This dissertation examines the representation of spatiality in female adultery novels by women. I e...
This dissertation explores amatory fiction as a genre significant to English literary history. I gro...
This thesis explores the ways selected American women writers utilize spatial imagery to convey thei...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2014"Remodeling the Frauenzimmer: Women-Authored Spaces in...
The aim of this work is to map a correlation between gender and space in selected Victorian and Mode...
Interrogating two cases, Sealed Off and Miss Sophia’s Diary, this paper seeks to apply spatial narra...
This final-year essay aims to explore the contradictions that are present when we compare the texts ...
This study examines how British novels produced during the long nineteenth century, the period from ...
When Victorian fiction entered academic study in the mid-twentieth century, the texts that were cons...
Drawing from contemporary spatial theories, this dissertation examines how nineteenth-century women ...
This project examines the representation of architectural and metaphoric spaces in the works of four...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 88-101.Introduction -- Chapter 1: Gender, space and narrative...
The dominant model of female authorship from 1690 to 1740 is London-centred, professional and fictio...
Reclaiming lost or forgotten (Victorian) popular women writers and their works is still an important...
Includes vita.[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT AUTHOR'S REQUEST.] Between 1790 an...