Adaptation of the novel by Elizabeth Gaskell. Based on Elizabeth Gaskell’s Cranford stories, Laura Turner’s adaptation delightfully brings the rural village to life where etiquette rules, underpinned by a healthy amount of gossip. Applying the ideals of gentility and propriety, the idiosyncratic ways of the women of Cranford are thrown into disarray as modernity encroaches in the form of a new railway line coming harrowingly close. While Cranford’s eclectic women strive to stay immersed in the sweet pleasures and sometimes heart-breaking realities of simple village life, it becomes apparent that the world is changing in the face of the industrial revolution, and that Cranford will have to change with it. First performed by Chapterhou...
The designation ‘Mrs Gaskell’ has been damning. This form of address, emphasising her (willingly emb...
Gaskell's 1855 novel North and South represents an important departure from her earlier works, which...
This article argues that Elizabeth Gaskell’s Cranford (1853)—both the fictional place and the novel—...
The study focuses on the BBC adaptation of Elizabeth Gaskell's "Cranford", investigating to what ext...
The threat of change and the loss it can incur creates the need to preserve a detailed version of th...
Elizabeth Gaskells Roman Cranford und dessen gleichnamige BBC-Verfilmung aus dem Jahr 2007 zeigen de...
My reading of Elizabeth Gaskell's community narrative Cranford (1853) addresses the novel's idiosync...
During 1851-53, Gaskell wrote two novels in tandem: Cranford, a collection of affectionate and comic...
This thesis defines and traces female community across Elizabeth Gaskell\u27s novels Cranford, North...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 64-67).This thesis looks at blatant and subversive performan...
With the new technological advancements, such as the invention of the steam train and the first fact...
Murray file copy no. 29."Works by Mrs. Gaskell" -- verso of half title.Added series t.p.Cranford -- ...
Elizabeth Gaskell’s Cranford (1853) can be regarded as a notable work in terms of the attitude towar...
An overview of the literary evolution of Elizabeth Gaskell throughout Mary Barton, North and South, ...
Hanbury is getting more and more governed by the principles of the French Revolution. Lady Ludlow, l...
The designation ‘Mrs Gaskell’ has been damning. This form of address, emphasising her (willingly emb...
Gaskell's 1855 novel North and South represents an important departure from her earlier works, which...
This article argues that Elizabeth Gaskell’s Cranford (1853)—both the fictional place and the novel—...
The study focuses on the BBC adaptation of Elizabeth Gaskell's "Cranford", investigating to what ext...
The threat of change and the loss it can incur creates the need to preserve a detailed version of th...
Elizabeth Gaskells Roman Cranford und dessen gleichnamige BBC-Verfilmung aus dem Jahr 2007 zeigen de...
My reading of Elizabeth Gaskell's community narrative Cranford (1853) addresses the novel's idiosync...
During 1851-53, Gaskell wrote two novels in tandem: Cranford, a collection of affectionate and comic...
This thesis defines and traces female community across Elizabeth Gaskell\u27s novels Cranford, North...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 64-67).This thesis looks at blatant and subversive performan...
With the new technological advancements, such as the invention of the steam train and the first fact...
Murray file copy no. 29."Works by Mrs. Gaskell" -- verso of half title.Added series t.p.Cranford -- ...
Elizabeth Gaskell’s Cranford (1853) can be regarded as a notable work in terms of the attitude towar...
An overview of the literary evolution of Elizabeth Gaskell throughout Mary Barton, North and South, ...
Hanbury is getting more and more governed by the principles of the French Revolution. Lady Ludlow, l...
The designation ‘Mrs Gaskell’ has been damning. This form of address, emphasising her (willingly emb...
Gaskell's 1855 novel North and South represents an important departure from her earlier works, which...
This article argues that Elizabeth Gaskell’s Cranford (1853)—both the fictional place and the novel—...