This essay explores the relationship between theories of domestic pedagogy as articulated in eighteenth-century conduct books, and fictional representations of home education in novels of the period. The fictional discussions of domestic pedagogy interrogate eighteenth-century assumptions about the innate superiority of a domestic education for women. In so doing, they participate in a much wider eighteenth-century and Regency-period debate about the proper role of women in public life. In order to make the argument that a woman's education was vital to the public welfare of the nation, writers from Mary Wollstonecraft to Jane Austen shifted the grounds of the debate, making the previously private into a matter of public concern. Early eigh...
The formation of feminine subjectivity in nineteenth-century American middle-class culture centered ...
Novels of Eighteenth- Century England demonstrates how women's clothing differed in terms of Class, ...
Although the availability of classroom texts and scholarship on 18th century British women writers h...
This essay explores the relationship between theories of domestic pedagogy as articulated in eightee...
© 2010 Catherine Elizabeth Margaret ScottThe period 1650 to 1750 in England saw the development of s...
This genre study seeks to understand the debate embedded in eighteenth-century English, French, and ...
By the end of the eighteenth century, women's education had become a topic of serious cultural deba...
Modern criticism and scholarship on the novels of Jane Austen owemuch to the cumulative body of crit...
This thesis analyses representations of female education in early modern drama, c. 1590-1730. The fi...
Published in 1783, this translation was hugely popular in late eighteenth-century Britain. It was re...
This thesis examines the role of education in women\u27s access to opportunity and success in eighte...
In the late eighteenth century we observe an intense debate regarding female education, an issue tha...
Women’s writing and education in the eighteenth century have received extensive critical attention i...
Austen’s juvenilia is a fruitful entry point into the late-eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century ...
The purpose of this essay is to investigate how women were educated during the Victorian period; it ...
The formation of feminine subjectivity in nineteenth-century American middle-class culture centered ...
Novels of Eighteenth- Century England demonstrates how women's clothing differed in terms of Class, ...
Although the availability of classroom texts and scholarship on 18th century British women writers h...
This essay explores the relationship between theories of domestic pedagogy as articulated in eightee...
© 2010 Catherine Elizabeth Margaret ScottThe period 1650 to 1750 in England saw the development of s...
This genre study seeks to understand the debate embedded in eighteenth-century English, French, and ...
By the end of the eighteenth century, women's education had become a topic of serious cultural deba...
Modern criticism and scholarship on the novels of Jane Austen owemuch to the cumulative body of crit...
This thesis analyses representations of female education in early modern drama, c. 1590-1730. The fi...
Published in 1783, this translation was hugely popular in late eighteenth-century Britain. It was re...
This thesis examines the role of education in women\u27s access to opportunity and success in eighte...
In the late eighteenth century we observe an intense debate regarding female education, an issue tha...
Women’s writing and education in the eighteenth century have received extensive critical attention i...
Austen’s juvenilia is a fruitful entry point into the late-eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century ...
The purpose of this essay is to investigate how women were educated during the Victorian period; it ...
The formation of feminine subjectivity in nineteenth-century American middle-class culture centered ...
Novels of Eighteenth- Century England demonstrates how women's clothing differed in terms of Class, ...
Although the availability of classroom texts and scholarship on 18th century British women writers h...