In the context of the Victorian Era, madness acquired a complex and often negative perception. Female madness was highly significant as women were in many cases considered to be mad by nature. Such is the case that Victorian literature gave birth to a number of “mad women” who illustrated the application of madness to the female genre. The object of our study consists of an analysis of madness and female madness during the Victorian era in relation to Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll, as madness constitutes one of its most important motives. Having a larger insight on the topic will provide us with a better comprehension of both the Victorian society and Carroll’s Wonderland, clarifying how relevant madness was and how it a...
Since Elaine Showalter’s publication of The Female Malady in 1985, various scholars have addressed t...
Lewis Carroll\u27s 1865 scene of a recalcitrant Alice in the courtroom, defying the court\u27s aut...
In my dissertation, “Monstrous Femininities: Elizabethan Influence on Nineteenth-Century Literature,...
Penelitian in bertujuan untuk menemukan kekacauan secara psikologis terhadap Alice dan membahas baga...
This thesis explores the complex ways in which mental illness was portrayed in Victorian fiction. It...
This dissertation, A Psychoanalytical Reading of Female Madness in Selected Victorian Literature, ar...
Victorian women certainly faced various limitations that Victorian men did not, including limited jo...
Madness has always been a difficult concept to define as different sorts of behaviors have been cons...
The general belief concerning the relationship between art and reality is usually that art imitates ...
Mad female characters in Western literature have traditionally represented attempts by dominant patr...
This article investigates the significance of the presence and depiction of mental illness and chang...
This project examines how Alice in Wonderland uses images of freak women to actively voice—and ultim...
This paper aims to accomplish the following objectives: locate instances of female madness or hyster...
From the mad heroines of classic Victorian literature to the depictions of female insanity in modern...
abstract: A Monster in the House: Gothic and Victorian Representations of Female Madness explores fe...
Since Elaine Showalter’s publication of The Female Malady in 1985, various scholars have addressed t...
Lewis Carroll\u27s 1865 scene of a recalcitrant Alice in the courtroom, defying the court\u27s aut...
In my dissertation, “Monstrous Femininities: Elizabethan Influence on Nineteenth-Century Literature,...
Penelitian in bertujuan untuk menemukan kekacauan secara psikologis terhadap Alice dan membahas baga...
This thesis explores the complex ways in which mental illness was portrayed in Victorian fiction. It...
This dissertation, A Psychoanalytical Reading of Female Madness in Selected Victorian Literature, ar...
Victorian women certainly faced various limitations that Victorian men did not, including limited jo...
Madness has always been a difficult concept to define as different sorts of behaviors have been cons...
The general belief concerning the relationship between art and reality is usually that art imitates ...
Mad female characters in Western literature have traditionally represented attempts by dominant patr...
This article investigates the significance of the presence and depiction of mental illness and chang...
This project examines how Alice in Wonderland uses images of freak women to actively voice—and ultim...
This paper aims to accomplish the following objectives: locate instances of female madness or hyster...
From the mad heroines of classic Victorian literature to the depictions of female insanity in modern...
abstract: A Monster in the House: Gothic and Victorian Representations of Female Madness explores fe...
Since Elaine Showalter’s publication of The Female Malady in 1985, various scholars have addressed t...
Lewis Carroll\u27s 1865 scene of a recalcitrant Alice in the courtroom, defying the court\u27s aut...
In my dissertation, “Monstrous Femininities: Elizabethan Influence on Nineteenth-Century Literature,...