International audienceMrs Henry Wood is frequently cast as impeccably English, yet she spent 20 years of her life (1836-56) living in France, unusually in the period preceding the beginning of her literary career. This article sets out the known biographical details of Wood's French sojourn, before analysing the place of France and the French in a selection of her work, comprising the handful of France-related stories she published in two London magazines between 1851 and 1856, and two subsequent novels set partly in France: East Lynne (1861) and the lesser-known Oswald Cray (1864). It is argued that though her experience of France ought to presage a sympathetic or at least a nuanced portrayal, the country remains a threatening place in her...
The French translation of her prize-winning novel 'Come in Spinner' (with Florence James) took Dymph...
International audienceElena Poniatowska (Paris 1932) has published countless articles since her debu...
The aim of the article is to analyse M. Sadler's book An Englishman à la Campagne: Life in Deepest F...
International audienceMrs Henry Wood is frequently cast as impeccably English, yet she spent 20 year...
Ellen (Mrs. Henry) Wood (1814–87) was one of the bestselling British novelists of the nineteenth cen...
The author discusses the construction of Englishness in Katherine Mansfield’s short story Je Ne Parl...
Ellen Wood?s East Lynne, a popular sensation fiction, began because of its original and insatiable B...
The business of novels in the long eighteenth century was an international affair. This chapter argu...
This book (224 p. including bibliography and index) focuses on one of the lesser-known Victorian wom...
The talk is about Edith Wharton's commitment to Paris and to France from 1914 to 1918. A wealthy and...
Authors Edith Wharton and Henry James, both familiar with the Newport life, were both inveterate tra...
An overview of the life and career of Victorian best-seller, Ellen (Mrs Henry) Wood, and a discussio...
The article’s aim is to present the unique character of French province on the example of Berry – t...
Dialecto literario. -- Worcestershire. -- Pertenece a la colección LD 1800-1950 del Salamanca Corpus...
While in Europe during the second half of the nineteenth century - especially in France - intellectu...
The French translation of her prize-winning novel 'Come in Spinner' (with Florence James) took Dymph...
International audienceElena Poniatowska (Paris 1932) has published countless articles since her debu...
The aim of the article is to analyse M. Sadler's book An Englishman à la Campagne: Life in Deepest F...
International audienceMrs Henry Wood is frequently cast as impeccably English, yet she spent 20 year...
Ellen (Mrs. Henry) Wood (1814–87) was one of the bestselling British novelists of the nineteenth cen...
The author discusses the construction of Englishness in Katherine Mansfield’s short story Je Ne Parl...
Ellen Wood?s East Lynne, a popular sensation fiction, began because of its original and insatiable B...
The business of novels in the long eighteenth century was an international affair. This chapter argu...
This book (224 p. including bibliography and index) focuses on one of the lesser-known Victorian wom...
The talk is about Edith Wharton's commitment to Paris and to France from 1914 to 1918. A wealthy and...
Authors Edith Wharton and Henry James, both familiar with the Newport life, were both inveterate tra...
An overview of the life and career of Victorian best-seller, Ellen (Mrs Henry) Wood, and a discussio...
The article’s aim is to present the unique character of French province on the example of Berry – t...
Dialecto literario. -- Worcestershire. -- Pertenece a la colección LD 1800-1950 del Salamanca Corpus...
While in Europe during the second half of the nineteenth century - especially in France - intellectu...
The French translation of her prize-winning novel 'Come in Spinner' (with Florence James) took Dymph...
International audienceElena Poniatowska (Paris 1932) has published countless articles since her debu...
The aim of the article is to analyse M. Sadler's book An Englishman à la Campagne: Life in Deepest F...