Eliza Haywood’s works are often contentious and are daring in nature, and are often construed as rebellious works with fantastical elements. Due to this eccentric nature, I will argue in my paper that readers are tilting to consider Haywood’s works as having a feminist stance and a slant towards women’s empowerment. This forms the first part of my paper, where I will work within the prose Fantomina, together with a feminist approach, to demonstrate how readers will observe Haywood’s employment of femininity as a disguise for empowerment, being an act of defence. In terms of elucidation, I define the term femininity as encompassing the physical, mental and emotional aspects of a woman. This induces readers to take on an observant role in the...
Thesis (M.A., English (Literature)) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2009.These chapters ...
Eliza Haywood’s novels and political writings are often considered in isolation from each other; how...
Although many people imagine Louisa May Alcott as the restrained, moral writer of children’s books s...
Writers of fiction capitalize upon dress’s potential as an agent of deception, using clothing as a m...
The eighteenth-century in Britain was a time in which women’s attempt to liberate themselves sexuall...
English honors thesisThe essence of the masquerade ball is one of secrecy and fantasy. As a uniquely...
My thesis connects Eliza Haywood with the Hillarians, a London-based coterie of young writers and ar...
This thesis analyzes scenes of “masquerade” in three literary texts, the Oresteia of Aeschylus (458 ...
When analyzing Eliza Haywood’s fiction, most critics focus on her use of sexuality and eroticism and...
This article locates Fantomina in a literary tradition that proposes all-female communities, such as...
Answering recent calls in Haywood scholarship for a re-evaluation of the ways in which we understand...
This dissertation examines the social landscape of eighteenth-century Britain as one that was especi...
An extremely fascinating idea, which is boldly exposed in one of the brilliant Shakespeare's comedie...
This study compares how girls that are disguised as boys are portrayed in both fiction and reality. ...
This thesis examines forms of disguise, transformation, and revelation in medieval English romances ...
Thesis (M.A., English (Literature)) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2009.These chapters ...
Eliza Haywood’s novels and political writings are often considered in isolation from each other; how...
Although many people imagine Louisa May Alcott as the restrained, moral writer of children’s books s...
Writers of fiction capitalize upon dress’s potential as an agent of deception, using clothing as a m...
The eighteenth-century in Britain was a time in which women’s attempt to liberate themselves sexuall...
English honors thesisThe essence of the masquerade ball is one of secrecy and fantasy. As a uniquely...
My thesis connects Eliza Haywood with the Hillarians, a London-based coterie of young writers and ar...
This thesis analyzes scenes of “masquerade” in three literary texts, the Oresteia of Aeschylus (458 ...
When analyzing Eliza Haywood’s fiction, most critics focus on her use of sexuality and eroticism and...
This article locates Fantomina in a literary tradition that proposes all-female communities, such as...
Answering recent calls in Haywood scholarship for a re-evaluation of the ways in which we understand...
This dissertation examines the social landscape of eighteenth-century Britain as one that was especi...
An extremely fascinating idea, which is boldly exposed in one of the brilliant Shakespeare's comedie...
This study compares how girls that are disguised as boys are portrayed in both fiction and reality. ...
This thesis examines forms of disguise, transformation, and revelation in medieval English romances ...
Thesis (M.A., English (Literature)) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2009.These chapters ...
Eliza Haywood’s novels and political writings are often considered in isolation from each other; how...
Although many people imagine Louisa May Alcott as the restrained, moral writer of children’s books s...