The moral issues that Charlotte Brontë addresses in her novel Shirley can be read as a Tory-radical exploration of the tensions and contradictions in early Victorian popular Toryism. The term Tory-radical is used heuristically to draw attention to the tensions and contradictions which faced popular Tories like Brontë, Benjamin Disraeli, Richard Oastler, Frances Trollope, and Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna as they responded to working-class unrest and poverty in the 1830s and 1840s. Drawing on recent work on the history of emotions, this essay casts new light on sympathetic feeling in Tory-radical fiction, which was key to its rise but also ultimately its failure as a subgenre and variant of popular Toryism
The appearance of Charlotte Bronte's novel Villette In 1853 provoked a vigorous critical reaction, f...
As a nineteenth-century writer, Charlotte Brontë lived during a tumultuous time of challenges to pr...
The Need for Material Gain: Brontë’s Criticism of Victorian Culture in Wuthering Heights is a disser...
Although it is well known that Charlotte Brontë had pronounced political views and interests from ch...
The novelist Charlotte Brontë and the historian E.P. Thompson both claimed that the Yorkshire Luddit...
Before one might legitimately enquire what the Brontës had to do with either ‘poetry’ or ‘politics’,...
The article looks at the Brontës' reasons for setting the action of their novels in the past, from t...
By taking Yorkshire Luddism as Shirley’s (1849) framework, Charlotte Brontë places political violenc...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Brontë Studies on 18/1...
Charlotte Brontë's Shirley leads us back to the early nineteenth century, into the period of the Na...
This thesis examines the social and literary pressures and contexts which shaped the early Victorian...
The accession of Queen Victoria to the throne of England in 1837 gave birth to a period of stability...
This thesis explores the relationship between faerie and power in the work of Charlotte Brontë. Focu...
This dissertation explores the ambiguous nature of the social criticism in Charlotte Brontë’s novels...
Charlotte Brontë (1816-1855) inhabited a society in which beauty was elevated above all other female...
The appearance of Charlotte Bronte's novel Villette In 1853 provoked a vigorous critical reaction, f...
As a nineteenth-century writer, Charlotte Brontë lived during a tumultuous time of challenges to pr...
The Need for Material Gain: Brontë’s Criticism of Victorian Culture in Wuthering Heights is a disser...
Although it is well known that Charlotte Brontë had pronounced political views and interests from ch...
The novelist Charlotte Brontë and the historian E.P. Thompson both claimed that the Yorkshire Luddit...
Before one might legitimately enquire what the Brontës had to do with either ‘poetry’ or ‘politics’,...
The article looks at the Brontës' reasons for setting the action of their novels in the past, from t...
By taking Yorkshire Luddism as Shirley’s (1849) framework, Charlotte Brontë places political violenc...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Brontë Studies on 18/1...
Charlotte Brontë's Shirley leads us back to the early nineteenth century, into the period of the Na...
This thesis examines the social and literary pressures and contexts which shaped the early Victorian...
The accession of Queen Victoria to the throne of England in 1837 gave birth to a period of stability...
This thesis explores the relationship between faerie and power in the work of Charlotte Brontë. Focu...
This dissertation explores the ambiguous nature of the social criticism in Charlotte Brontë’s novels...
Charlotte Brontë (1816-1855) inhabited a society in which beauty was elevated above all other female...
The appearance of Charlotte Bronte's novel Villette In 1853 provoked a vigorous critical reaction, f...
As a nineteenth-century writer, Charlotte Brontë lived during a tumultuous time of challenges to pr...
The Need for Material Gain: Brontë’s Criticism of Victorian Culture in Wuthering Heights is a disser...