Conventions of nineteenth-century British society restricted the subjects of women’s authorship and biased the reception of women’s writing. By publishing anonymously, or using a male pseudonym, women could evade the gender bias imposed on their literary works. The author’s name, however, was not the only means by which women could influence society’s reception of their works; a male narrator allowed the author not only a male persona, but a male voice through which to convey her writing. This paper will explore the characters of Captain Robert Walton in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, and Mr. Lockwood in Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights. As frame narratives, both Frankenstein and Wuthering Heights rely on these characters to shape the entire ...
"Renegotiating Science: British Women Novelists and Evolution Controversies, 1826-1876," examines th...
This dissertation provides the first comprehensive account of the phenomenon of the fictional noveli...
This project seeks to explore female monstrosity, specifically the femme fatale, in Gothic literatur...
Conventions of nineteenth-century British society restricted the subjects of women’s authorship and ...
Ever since Ellen Moer's "Literary Women" (1976), "Frankenstein" has been recognized as a novel in wh...
Drawing on feminist criticism and postcolonial theory, this study analyzes conversations about femal...
ABSTRACTKumalasari, Isti. 2012. The Female Voices in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein: TheModern Promethe...
The article focuses on the problem of the narrator’s and the author’s identity in Mary Shelley’s Fr...
Characterization of nineteenth-century literary Gothic is usually confined to affective response. Th...
In this study, I set out to examine the multifarious ways in which Romantic-era women writers approp...
The focus of this study is a narratological reading emphasizing the narrator/narratee relationships ...
In Shelley’s Wake: Tracing Two Centuries of Impact builds upon the strong biographical scholarship o...
Mary Shelley developed and wrote Frankenstein (1818) amidst the rich intellectual and scientific dev...
Rarely did authors of the nineteenth century choose to make their vampires female. Joseph Sheridan L...
This thesis details the pseudonym use of several key female Victorian authors: Charlotte Brontë, Ann...
"Renegotiating Science: British Women Novelists and Evolution Controversies, 1826-1876," examines th...
This dissertation provides the first comprehensive account of the phenomenon of the fictional noveli...
This project seeks to explore female monstrosity, specifically the femme fatale, in Gothic literatur...
Conventions of nineteenth-century British society restricted the subjects of women’s authorship and ...
Ever since Ellen Moer's "Literary Women" (1976), "Frankenstein" has been recognized as a novel in wh...
Drawing on feminist criticism and postcolonial theory, this study analyzes conversations about femal...
ABSTRACTKumalasari, Isti. 2012. The Female Voices in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein: TheModern Promethe...
The article focuses on the problem of the narrator’s and the author’s identity in Mary Shelley’s Fr...
Characterization of nineteenth-century literary Gothic is usually confined to affective response. Th...
In this study, I set out to examine the multifarious ways in which Romantic-era women writers approp...
The focus of this study is a narratological reading emphasizing the narrator/narratee relationships ...
In Shelley’s Wake: Tracing Two Centuries of Impact builds upon the strong biographical scholarship o...
Mary Shelley developed and wrote Frankenstein (1818) amidst the rich intellectual and scientific dev...
Rarely did authors of the nineteenth century choose to make their vampires female. Joseph Sheridan L...
This thesis details the pseudonym use of several key female Victorian authors: Charlotte Brontë, Ann...
"Renegotiating Science: British Women Novelists and Evolution Controversies, 1826-1876," examines th...
This dissertation provides the first comprehensive account of the phenomenon of the fictional noveli...
This project seeks to explore female monstrosity, specifically the femme fatale, in Gothic literatur...