This article analyses the symbiotic relationship between Lucy Snowe’s madness and isolation in Charlotte Brontë’s Villette (1853). I argue that madness enhances isolation, and isolation enhances madness, through an exploration of Lucy’s solitude. In the novel, Lucy endures enforced isolation as a treatment for madness, while she chooses other voluntary forms of isolation, such as the natural world, as a respite from social pressures. Through her relationships with Dr John and M. Paul, Lucy is observed by the male gaze, which is used to police her madness and impose gender conformity. By re-examining madness in line with approaches from Mad Studies as a unique identity rather than a classifiable mental illness, this article explores how them...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the article\u27s first paragraph. Dreams and fantasies provide huma...
Madness has long been an object of fascination in the cultural imagination, constituting the focal p...
This study uses a narrative analytic approach to explore the similarities and differences between pr...
This article analyses the symbiotic relationship between Lucy Snowe’s madness and isolation in Charl...
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...
Critics of Charlotte Brontë’s “Villette” note that Lucy Snowe, the mysterious and provocative narrat...
Madness has always been a difficult concept to define as different sorts of behaviors have been cons...
When R.D. Laing wrote The Divided Self in 1960, his goal was “to make madness, and the process of go...
This article investigates the significance of the presence and depiction of mental illness and chang...
This article examines themes of madness and mental illness in fictional and non-fictional writing b...
This dissertation, A Psychoanalytical Reading of Female Madness in Selected Victorian Literature, ar...
Historically speaking, women have been associated with madness, be it Medea from Ancient Greece, the...
Since Elaine Showalter’s publication of The Female Malady in 1985, various scholars have addressed t...
It has been claimed that madness is a “female malady”. This claim has been supported by the fact tha...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the article\u27s first paragraph. Dreams and fantasies provide huma...
Madness has long been an object of fascination in the cultural imagination, constituting the focal p...
This study uses a narrative analytic approach to explore the similarities and differences between pr...
This article analyses the symbiotic relationship between Lucy Snowe’s madness and isolation in Charl...
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...
Critics of Charlotte Brontë’s “Villette” note that Lucy Snowe, the mysterious and provocative narrat...
Madness has always been a difficult concept to define as different sorts of behaviors have been cons...
When R.D. Laing wrote The Divided Self in 1960, his goal was “to make madness, and the process of go...
This article investigates the significance of the presence and depiction of mental illness and chang...
This article examines themes of madness and mental illness in fictional and non-fictional writing b...
This dissertation, A Psychoanalytical Reading of Female Madness in Selected Victorian Literature, ar...
Historically speaking, women have been associated with madness, be it Medea from Ancient Greece, the...
Since Elaine Showalter’s publication of The Female Malady in 1985, various scholars have addressed t...
It has been claimed that madness is a “female malady”. This claim has been supported by the fact tha...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the article\u27s first paragraph. Dreams and fantasies provide huma...
Madness has long been an object of fascination in the cultural imagination, constituting the focal p...
This study uses a narrative analytic approach to explore the similarities and differences between pr...