English women writers of the eighteenth century manifested enthusiasm for a form best described as a framed-novelle sequence, that is, a form in which conversations between characters/narrators are interspersed with embedded narratives. This thesis argues that the framed-novelle, with its distinctive juxtaposition of narrative and critical conversation facilitated feminine intervention in the period’s political, social, and literary debates. It demonstrates that Delarivier Manley, Jane Barker, Eliza Haywood, Sarah Scott, Sarah Fielding and Jane Collier used the framed-novelle sequence to develop a feminine but nonetheless authoritative socio-critical voice which allowed them not only to intervene in contemporary literary debates about the r...
ABSTRACT: Teh rise of the novel in eighteenth-century England foregrounded woman as protagonist of t...
textIn this dissertation, I examine antagonistic relationships between women writers in the first ha...
In the later eighteenth and earlier nineteenth centuries novels were believed to have the power to s...
English women writers of the eighteenth century manifested enthusiasm for a form best described as a...
My dissertation argues that female writers in the eighteenth century engaged in fictional acts of wo...
This study is an examination of how gendered characters in eighteenth-century British women\u27s fic...
The emergence and development of the modern novel used to be viewed as a largely masculine affair. H...
During and shortly after the French Revolution, women in England were writing politically significan...
From the 1740s to 1800 there was a great increase both in the output of novels, and the number of wo...
This chapter explores the generic elements of novels written by women writers during the last three ...
Fictional depictions of feminine reading and writing practices reveal transformations in expectation...
This dissertation examines the relationship between the drama and the novel in the "Long" Eighteenth...
In the mid-eighteenth century, women writers participated in dynamic and innovative criticism about ...
By the end of the eighteenth century, women's education had become a topic of serious cultural deba...
This thesis argues that the flâneuse is present in literature well before the late nineteenth centur...
ABSTRACT: Teh rise of the novel in eighteenth-century England foregrounded woman as protagonist of t...
textIn this dissertation, I examine antagonistic relationships between women writers in the first ha...
In the later eighteenth and earlier nineteenth centuries novels were believed to have the power to s...
English women writers of the eighteenth century manifested enthusiasm for a form best described as a...
My dissertation argues that female writers in the eighteenth century engaged in fictional acts of wo...
This study is an examination of how gendered characters in eighteenth-century British women\u27s fic...
The emergence and development of the modern novel used to be viewed as a largely masculine affair. H...
During and shortly after the French Revolution, women in England were writing politically significan...
From the 1740s to 1800 there was a great increase both in the output of novels, and the number of wo...
This chapter explores the generic elements of novels written by women writers during the last three ...
Fictional depictions of feminine reading and writing practices reveal transformations in expectation...
This dissertation examines the relationship between the drama and the novel in the "Long" Eighteenth...
In the mid-eighteenth century, women writers participated in dynamic and innovative criticism about ...
By the end of the eighteenth century, women's education had become a topic of serious cultural deba...
This thesis argues that the flâneuse is present in literature well before the late nineteenth centur...
ABSTRACT: Teh rise of the novel in eighteenth-century England foregrounded woman as protagonist of t...
textIn this dissertation, I examine antagonistic relationships between women writers in the first ha...
In the later eighteenth and earlier nineteenth centuries novels were believed to have the power to s...