Includes bibliographical references (p. 64-67).This thesis looks at blatant and subversive performances in Elizabeth Gaskell's Cranford, North and South, and Wives and Daughters. Referencing studies of nineteenth-century performance theory, I will argue that Gaskell, aware of her contemporaries' obsession with theatricality, created works that are ultimately concerned with authentic performances of societal roles. These roles, Gaskell paradoxically argues, have the dualistic potential of either initiating self-knowledge or trapping the individual in a self-annihilating existence. Seeking to navigate this duality, Gaskell acknowledges the integral part the community plays in a self's development but ultimately privileges individual integrity...
My reading of Elizabeth Gaskell's community narrative Cranford (1853) addresses the novel's idiosync...
This study examines how Jane Austen’s knowledge of theatricality and performance influenced her work...
This is the author's accepted manuscript of the chapter published in the book "Elizabeth Gaskell: Vi...
This thesis analyzes the aspects of performance and performativity in Elizabeth Gaskell's Cranford a...
Elizabeth Gaskell’s early cognisance of the politics of gender has propelled interest in coping with...
This thesis defines and traces female community across Elizabeth Gaskell\u27s novels Cranford, North...
An overview of the literary evolution of Elizabeth Gaskell throughout Mary Barton, North and South, ...
Critical attention to Elizabeth Gaskell's novel North and South (1854-55), and to nineteenth-century...
In this dissertation, I examine relationships between gender and agency in the works of Victorian au...
For centuries, humans have had a desire to classify everything, including themselves. Society is org...
The threat of change and the loss it can incur creates the need to preserve a detailed version of th...
Building on previous feminist literary criticism of Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South (1854-55), t...
Adaptation of the novel by Elizabeth Gaskell. Based on Elizabeth Gaskell’s Cranford stories, Lau...
It is generally said that Elizabeth Gaskell, unlike many nineteenthcentury women writers, thought co...
The designation ‘Mrs Gaskell’ has been damning. This form of address, emphasising her (willingly emb...
My reading of Elizabeth Gaskell's community narrative Cranford (1853) addresses the novel's idiosync...
This study examines how Jane Austen’s knowledge of theatricality and performance influenced her work...
This is the author's accepted manuscript of the chapter published in the book "Elizabeth Gaskell: Vi...
This thesis analyzes the aspects of performance and performativity in Elizabeth Gaskell's Cranford a...
Elizabeth Gaskell’s early cognisance of the politics of gender has propelled interest in coping with...
This thesis defines and traces female community across Elizabeth Gaskell\u27s novels Cranford, North...
An overview of the literary evolution of Elizabeth Gaskell throughout Mary Barton, North and South, ...
Critical attention to Elizabeth Gaskell's novel North and South (1854-55), and to nineteenth-century...
In this dissertation, I examine relationships between gender and agency in the works of Victorian au...
For centuries, humans have had a desire to classify everything, including themselves. Society is org...
The threat of change and the loss it can incur creates the need to preserve a detailed version of th...
Building on previous feminist literary criticism of Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South (1854-55), t...
Adaptation of the novel by Elizabeth Gaskell. Based on Elizabeth Gaskell’s Cranford stories, Lau...
It is generally said that Elizabeth Gaskell, unlike many nineteenthcentury women writers, thought co...
The designation ‘Mrs Gaskell’ has been damning. This form of address, emphasising her (willingly emb...
My reading of Elizabeth Gaskell's community narrative Cranford (1853) addresses the novel's idiosync...
This study examines how Jane Austen’s knowledge of theatricality and performance influenced her work...
This is the author's accepted manuscript of the chapter published in the book "Elizabeth Gaskell: Vi...