My thesis investigates the processes of reciprocal, transatlantic literary exchange between Britain and the United States in the nineteenth century. While these specific transnational relations have received much critical attention in recent years, I extend current theoretical frameworks by focusing on how women‘s domestic fiction operates as a currency for literal and ideological interchanges between Britain and the United States. Concentrating primarily upon Elizabeth Gaskell‘s and Louisa May Alcott‘s fictions, I trace how they operate as 'transatlantic domestic narratives‘. I use this term to refer to the mobility of their material texts as they circulate within a transatlantic community, and also to articulate the generic narrative trop...
This thesis examines how socio-historical influences shape the protagonists of Virginia Woolf’s The ...
The eighteenth century witnessed the rapid expansion of social, political, religious and literary ne...
The dissertation traces intersections among subjectivity, gender, desire, and nation in English coun...
My thesis investigates the processes of reciprocal, transatlantic literary exchange between Britain ...
This thesis examines literary representations of women’s work in British and American fiction writte...
This dissertation examines select Victorian and Modernist women writers\u27 autobiographical narrati...
This study examines the first novels of Frances Burney and Tobias Smollett in order to analyze the e...
The domestic visit was a component of the short stories of nineteenth-century women’s magazines, of...
Focusing on late nineteenth-century American narrative fiction from 1892-1915, “The Gendered Subject...
This paper examines romantic relationships between U.S. and non-U.S. citizens in Diana and Persis, L...
This thesis explores the meanings of home in Elizabeth Gaskell’s fiction. I argue that there are fiv...
My Ph.D. examines women’s writing in the interwar period through a questioning of the boundaries bet...
In the nineteenth century increasing numbers of people crossed and re-crossed the Atlantic following...
Be they explorers, adventurers, travellers, exiles or expatriates, scores of women have broken free ...
Keywords: Elizabeth Gaskell, Sylvia's Lovers, whaling, impressment, slavery, American Civil War Gask...
This thesis examines how socio-historical influences shape the protagonists of Virginia Woolf’s The ...
The eighteenth century witnessed the rapid expansion of social, political, religious and literary ne...
The dissertation traces intersections among subjectivity, gender, desire, and nation in English coun...
My thesis investigates the processes of reciprocal, transatlantic literary exchange between Britain ...
This thesis examines literary representations of women’s work in British and American fiction writte...
This dissertation examines select Victorian and Modernist women writers\u27 autobiographical narrati...
This study examines the first novels of Frances Burney and Tobias Smollett in order to analyze the e...
The domestic visit was a component of the short stories of nineteenth-century women’s magazines, of...
Focusing on late nineteenth-century American narrative fiction from 1892-1915, “The Gendered Subject...
This paper examines romantic relationships between U.S. and non-U.S. citizens in Diana and Persis, L...
This thesis explores the meanings of home in Elizabeth Gaskell’s fiction. I argue that there are fiv...
My Ph.D. examines women’s writing in the interwar period through a questioning of the boundaries bet...
In the nineteenth century increasing numbers of people crossed and re-crossed the Atlantic following...
Be they explorers, adventurers, travellers, exiles or expatriates, scores of women have broken free ...
Keywords: Elizabeth Gaskell, Sylvia's Lovers, whaling, impressment, slavery, American Civil War Gask...
This thesis examines how socio-historical influences shape the protagonists of Virginia Woolf’s The ...
The eighteenth century witnessed the rapid expansion of social, political, religious and literary ne...
The dissertation traces intersections among subjectivity, gender, desire, and nation in English coun...