PhDVictorian medical men, writers, relatives of the dying and consumptive sufferers themselves seized on the narrative potential of representations of the disease in a variety of ways. I argue that both medical and lay writers subscribed to a common set of beliefs about the disease and that medical knowledge, moreover, shared a common narrative way of knowing and understanding it. I analyse aspects of general clinical expository texts, including accompanying illustrations, showing how a narrative knowledge of death and the tubercular body was elaborated. Furthermore, I show how documents used in the compilation of medical statistics on the cause of death were fundamentally narrative through their reliance on case narratives. It i...
The fact of death is universal. So too is the fact of womanhood. Yet each age aims to ameliorate the...
In several Victorian novels, a character becomes incapacitated—and bedridden—for a period of time du...
This article examines the role that references to morbid anatomy played in some popular Victorian no...
When considering the Victorian era, a common perspective of the culture is of one that was prudish, ...
I have chosen six major Victorian novels in order to prove that each writer uses death to develop th...
Nineteenth-century British fiction is often dismissed as necrophillic or obsessed with death. While ...
“I passed on to the gate, and stooped down. I lifted the heavy head, put the long dank hair aside, a...
The profuse illness and nursing narratives in Victorian texts frequently feature sympathy for physic...
In contrast to sanitized portrayals of death today, ideas and behaviors surrounding death permeated ...
Why was the Victorian feminine ideal emaciated and consumptive, epitomized by Dante Gabriel Rossetti...
My thesis applies the critical lens of disability studies to the Victorian public health crisis, and...
In the medical humanities, there has been a growing interest in diagnosing disease in fictional char...
This thesis is about the nineteenth-century psychiatric idea, monomania, in medical, literary and po...
Disease was a constant and unavoidable facet of life in British society during the Victorian Era. De...
Romantic Ends reinterprets of the origins and legacies of romantic death, the cultural spectacle exe...
The fact of death is universal. So too is the fact of womanhood. Yet each age aims to ameliorate the...
In several Victorian novels, a character becomes incapacitated—and bedridden—for a period of time du...
This article examines the role that references to morbid anatomy played in some popular Victorian no...
When considering the Victorian era, a common perspective of the culture is of one that was prudish, ...
I have chosen six major Victorian novels in order to prove that each writer uses death to develop th...
Nineteenth-century British fiction is often dismissed as necrophillic or obsessed with death. While ...
“I passed on to the gate, and stooped down. I lifted the heavy head, put the long dank hair aside, a...
The profuse illness and nursing narratives in Victorian texts frequently feature sympathy for physic...
In contrast to sanitized portrayals of death today, ideas and behaviors surrounding death permeated ...
Why was the Victorian feminine ideal emaciated and consumptive, epitomized by Dante Gabriel Rossetti...
My thesis applies the critical lens of disability studies to the Victorian public health crisis, and...
In the medical humanities, there has been a growing interest in diagnosing disease in fictional char...
This thesis is about the nineteenth-century psychiatric idea, monomania, in medical, literary and po...
Disease was a constant and unavoidable facet of life in British society during the Victorian Era. De...
Romantic Ends reinterprets of the origins and legacies of romantic death, the cultural spectacle exe...
The fact of death is universal. So too is the fact of womanhood. Yet each age aims to ameliorate the...
In several Victorian novels, a character becomes incapacitated—and bedridden—for a period of time du...
This article examines the role that references to morbid anatomy played in some popular Victorian no...