In the nineteenth century a specifically Victorian narrative of fallenness was constructed which reflected many of the anxieties of the age; consequently the fallen woman became a Victorian obsession. The narrative was utilised in David Copperfield, by Charles Dickens (1849-50), and in George Eliot’s Adam Bede (1859), with different aims and outcomes. Both authors had personal experience of Victorian society’s attitude to fallenness: Dickens, through his association with Urania Cottage and Eliot through her unconventional domestic life. This thesis investigates how contemporary discourse influenced the construction of fictional narratives of fallenness to variously confirm and challenge existing ideas about the nature of women and men, and ...
Victorian Britain is characterized by the growth of an urban industrial economy and the emergence of...
Victorian literature is filled with images of women who have sinned, but often these characters are ...
While Dickens' novels insist upon the naturalness of feminine morality, they also limit women's abil...
In the nineteenth century a specifically Victorian narrative of fallenness was constructed which ref...
This essay discusses Charles Dickens’ portrayal of the so-called “fallen” women in two of his works,...
Prostitution, an occupation once tolerated in English society, became known as the great social evi...
This thesis explores the counterintuitive concept of the fallen man in literature from the mid- and ...
In my dissertation I investigate three important aspects of Bleak House and David Copperfield. In t...
Prostitute, adulteress, unmarried woman who engages in sexual relations, victim of seduction—the Vic...
This paper examines the interest shown by Charles Dickens in rescuing so-called fallen women. It foc...
In real life, virtuous women have no stories. Or, at least, their brief stories always end in marria...
The aim of this thesis is to explore the representation of marital violence and domestic abuse in th...
This thesis will examine a variety of Victorian media to better understand the influence that negati...
Novel is one of the literary works that describes human life. It concerns with almost every aspect o...
Charles Dickens is not considered only as the “ first great urban novelist in England” but also as ...
Victorian Britain is characterized by the growth of an urban industrial economy and the emergence of...
Victorian literature is filled with images of women who have sinned, but often these characters are ...
While Dickens' novels insist upon the naturalness of feminine morality, they also limit women's abil...
In the nineteenth century a specifically Victorian narrative of fallenness was constructed which ref...
This essay discusses Charles Dickens’ portrayal of the so-called “fallen” women in two of his works,...
Prostitution, an occupation once tolerated in English society, became known as the great social evi...
This thesis explores the counterintuitive concept of the fallen man in literature from the mid- and ...
In my dissertation I investigate three important aspects of Bleak House and David Copperfield. In t...
Prostitute, adulteress, unmarried woman who engages in sexual relations, victim of seduction—the Vic...
This paper examines the interest shown by Charles Dickens in rescuing so-called fallen women. It foc...
In real life, virtuous women have no stories. Or, at least, their brief stories always end in marria...
The aim of this thesis is to explore the representation of marital violence and domestic abuse in th...
This thesis will examine a variety of Victorian media to better understand the influence that negati...
Novel is one of the literary works that describes human life. It concerns with almost every aspect o...
Charles Dickens is not considered only as the “ first great urban novelist in England” but also as ...
Victorian Britain is characterized by the growth of an urban industrial economy and the emergence of...
Victorian literature is filled with images of women who have sinned, but often these characters are ...
While Dickens' novels insist upon the naturalness of feminine morality, they also limit women's abil...