This article examines Sarah Waters' novel, Affinity, in the light of Victorian discourses concerning the nature of criminal women, spiritualism and lesbianism. Placing Waters' novel into the context of these discourses, the essay highlights the parallels between late Victorian and late-twentieth-century lesbianism, particularly in the ways in which Waters herself draws parallels between her central protagonist and diarist, Margaret Prior, and her own role as a contemporary lesbian author
The aim of this essay is to analyse Sarah Waters’s novel Affinity (1999) from the perspective of the...
This study is conducted to examine the portrayal of a lesbian continuum in Sarah Waters’ Fingersmith...
Fingersmith is a historical novel with a clear, non-heteronormative agenda. It was published in 2002...
This article examines Sarah Waters' novel, Affinity, in the light of Victorian discourses concerning...
This thesis analyses the work of British writer Sarah Waters, focussing on the inseparability of spa...
The lesbian historical novel is a genre that has been consistently neglected. Reasons of censorship ...
Sarah Waters is one of the most popular and most widely read novelists of recent times. Critically a...
Fingersmith (2002), Sarah Waters’ third neo-Victorian novel, represents the culmination of her susta...
In this thesis I examine the influences on the historical novels of Sarah Waters. Waters uses multip...
The central project of this thesis is to diagnose, define, and articulate the concept of resonance. ...
The Victorian Era may be seen as a real ‘age of madness’ because after all, the study of the human m...
Any study of Victorian sexuality provides a cultural mirror for our own contemporary anxieties about...
This paper discusses, from a psychoanalytic perspective, Sarah Waters’s novel Affinity (1999) which ...
Sarah Waters, born in Pembrokeshire in Wales in 1966, lives and works in London, a city that has bec...
This article explores the intersections between queerness and intellectual disability in the represe...
The aim of this essay is to analyse Sarah Waters’s novel Affinity (1999) from the perspective of the...
This study is conducted to examine the portrayal of a lesbian continuum in Sarah Waters’ Fingersmith...
Fingersmith is a historical novel with a clear, non-heteronormative agenda. It was published in 2002...
This article examines Sarah Waters' novel, Affinity, in the light of Victorian discourses concerning...
This thesis analyses the work of British writer Sarah Waters, focussing on the inseparability of spa...
The lesbian historical novel is a genre that has been consistently neglected. Reasons of censorship ...
Sarah Waters is one of the most popular and most widely read novelists of recent times. Critically a...
Fingersmith (2002), Sarah Waters’ third neo-Victorian novel, represents the culmination of her susta...
In this thesis I examine the influences on the historical novels of Sarah Waters. Waters uses multip...
The central project of this thesis is to diagnose, define, and articulate the concept of resonance. ...
The Victorian Era may be seen as a real ‘age of madness’ because after all, the study of the human m...
Any study of Victorian sexuality provides a cultural mirror for our own contemporary anxieties about...
This paper discusses, from a psychoanalytic perspective, Sarah Waters’s novel Affinity (1999) which ...
Sarah Waters, born in Pembrokeshire in Wales in 1966, lives and works in London, a city that has bec...
This article explores the intersections between queerness and intellectual disability in the represe...
The aim of this essay is to analyse Sarah Waters’s novel Affinity (1999) from the perspective of the...
This study is conducted to examine the portrayal of a lesbian continuum in Sarah Waters’ Fingersmith...
Fingersmith is a historical novel with a clear, non-heteronormative agenda. It was published in 2002...