Lovesickness is a common malady in British literature, but it is also an illness that has been perceived and diagnosed differently in different eras. The nineteenthcentury British novel incorporates a lovesickness that primarily affects women with physical symptoms, including fever, that may end in a female character's death. The fever of female lovesickness includes a delirium that allows a female character to play out the identity crisis she must feel at the loss of a significant relationship and possibly of her social status. Commonly conflated with a type of female madness, the nineteenthcentury novelists often focus less on the delirium and more on the physical symptoms of illness that affect a female character at the loss of love. The...
Sickly Sentimentalism: Pathology and Sympathy in American Women’s Literature, 1866-1900 examines the...
During the eighteenth-century, philosophers gave primacy to rationality specifying that reason could...
The Elizabethan poet Edmund Spenser published his sonnet sequence Visions of the Worlds Vanitie in a...
In early modern Europe, love was not a feeling, but a physiological change in the body. In its extre...
Throughout Western medical history, unconsummated, unreturned, or otherwise failed love was believed...
Ill health, accident and death are themes common to all of Jane Austen's novels. Some illnesses are ...
When we consider Victorian literature, it is striking to note the high number of novels that partici...
The present paper, placing its focus on three of Jane Austen’s canonical texts: Sense and Sensibilit...
“Feeling Clumsy, Feeling Alien: Gender and Affect in Victorian Sensation Fiction” explores the inter...
Discerning the Attraction of Jane Austen’s Literary Heroes Jane Austen is one of the most influentia...
This thesis will explore Jane Austen’s social commentary on class structure and boundaries as they e...
In several Victorian novels, a character becomes incapacitated—and bedridden—for a period of time du...
For years critics have noticed how Jane Austen uses “a cold, a sore throat, a sprained ankle, or som...
Les romanciers des XIIe et XIIIe siècles dépeignent des protagonistes atteints par la maladie d’amou...
This paper deals with illnesses, real and imagined, in Jane Austen’s world, and her writing as a mea...
Sickly Sentimentalism: Pathology and Sympathy in American Women’s Literature, 1866-1900 examines the...
During the eighteenth-century, philosophers gave primacy to rationality specifying that reason could...
The Elizabethan poet Edmund Spenser published his sonnet sequence Visions of the Worlds Vanitie in a...
In early modern Europe, love was not a feeling, but a physiological change in the body. In its extre...
Throughout Western medical history, unconsummated, unreturned, or otherwise failed love was believed...
Ill health, accident and death are themes common to all of Jane Austen's novels. Some illnesses are ...
When we consider Victorian literature, it is striking to note the high number of novels that partici...
The present paper, placing its focus on three of Jane Austen’s canonical texts: Sense and Sensibilit...
“Feeling Clumsy, Feeling Alien: Gender and Affect in Victorian Sensation Fiction” explores the inter...
Discerning the Attraction of Jane Austen’s Literary Heroes Jane Austen is one of the most influentia...
This thesis will explore Jane Austen’s social commentary on class structure and boundaries as they e...
In several Victorian novels, a character becomes incapacitated—and bedridden—for a period of time du...
For years critics have noticed how Jane Austen uses “a cold, a sore throat, a sprained ankle, or som...
Les romanciers des XIIe et XIIIe siècles dépeignent des protagonistes atteints par la maladie d’amou...
This paper deals with illnesses, real and imagined, in Jane Austen’s world, and her writing as a mea...
Sickly Sentimentalism: Pathology and Sympathy in American Women’s Literature, 1866-1900 examines the...
During the eighteenth-century, philosophers gave primacy to rationality specifying that reason could...
The Elizabethan poet Edmund Spenser published his sonnet sequence Visions of the Worlds Vanitie in a...