Ouida’s Under Two Flags (1867) is not a widely read Victorian novel today, but it is offers important insight into the philosophical concerns of a novelist who was hugely popular in her time. In Under Two Flags, Ouida explores what she saw as the epistemological problem developing in the nineteenth century, a nihilistic view that promoted scepticism, aestheticism, and idleness, which is a perspective she believed was responsible for the demise of the aristocracy. Wishing to restore the power and position of the aristocracy, Ouida sends her protagonist Bertie Cecil, a dandy who embodies the aestheticism and ennui of the upper class, to the French Foreign Legion in order to make an important social and psychological point. Ouida draws upon th...
Since the nineteenth-century, scholars have attempted to interpret the two sets of four reliefs on e...
For many years, the novels of Ouida (Maria Louise Ramé, 1839–1908), were rejected as offering nothin...
In his novels,W illiam G erhardie took the events provided b y life rather than inventing them, clai...
Ouida’s Under Two Flags (1867) is not a widely read Victorian novel today, but it is offers importan...
This first full-length study of the works of best-selling Victorian novelist Ouida (Marie Louise Ram...
Two Little Wooden Shoes was one of the most popular texts by Ouida, printed and consumed in at least...
This article examines the popular and non-canonical Victorian novelist Ouida (Maria Louise de la Ram...
Review of Jane Jordan & Andrew King (eds.). Ouida and Victorian Popular Culture. Farnham, UK & Burli...
19th century is a remarkable century in the history of literary renaissance. Many philosophers have ...
Although largely forgotten by the general public today, Ouida (Marie Louise de la Ramée, 1839–1908) ...
The Victorian Era was one of great social flux; tremendous advances in science and technology called...
A study of changing narrative forms in the nineteenth-century European novel. The changing fortunes ...
A Star Called Henry (1999) and At Swim, Two Boys (2001) are two novels in which their authors try to...
BETWEEN HISTORY AND MYTH: THE COURT OF MIRACLES IN VICTOR HUGO’S THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE-DAME A...
In the 1850es, the Second Empire settles in after five stormy decades that unveil the vanity of ...
Since the nineteenth-century, scholars have attempted to interpret the two sets of four reliefs on e...
For many years, the novels of Ouida (Maria Louise Ramé, 1839–1908), were rejected as offering nothin...
In his novels,W illiam G erhardie took the events provided b y life rather than inventing them, clai...
Ouida’s Under Two Flags (1867) is not a widely read Victorian novel today, but it is offers importan...
This first full-length study of the works of best-selling Victorian novelist Ouida (Marie Louise Ram...
Two Little Wooden Shoes was one of the most popular texts by Ouida, printed and consumed in at least...
This article examines the popular and non-canonical Victorian novelist Ouida (Maria Louise de la Ram...
Review of Jane Jordan & Andrew King (eds.). Ouida and Victorian Popular Culture. Farnham, UK & Burli...
19th century is a remarkable century in the history of literary renaissance. Many philosophers have ...
Although largely forgotten by the general public today, Ouida (Marie Louise de la Ramée, 1839–1908) ...
The Victorian Era was one of great social flux; tremendous advances in science and technology called...
A study of changing narrative forms in the nineteenth-century European novel. The changing fortunes ...
A Star Called Henry (1999) and At Swim, Two Boys (2001) are two novels in which their authors try to...
BETWEEN HISTORY AND MYTH: THE COURT OF MIRACLES IN VICTOR HUGO’S THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE-DAME A...
In the 1850es, the Second Empire settles in after five stormy decades that unveil the vanity of ...
Since the nineteenth-century, scholars have attempted to interpret the two sets of four reliefs on e...
For many years, the novels of Ouida (Maria Louise Ramé, 1839–1908), were rejected as offering nothin...
In his novels,W illiam G erhardie took the events provided b y life rather than inventing them, clai...