The novels of Fanny Burney are usually seen within the patriarchal code of individual autonomy, as domestic tales of female difficulties, or as stories of women as victims. All these views share the same values but do not explain narrative gaps that occur when heroines, who cannot confer names, resort to madness, sickness and hysteria in order to be heard. This study adopts a pluralistic perspective whereby woman functions as alterity, as the outsider who provides limits and homogeneity for culture. Burney exposes patriarchal strategies that create woman as other, granting the silenced female voice a discourse that reestablishes displaced, affective and communal bonds. Chapter one focusses upon Burney\u27s address to Nobody in the earl...
Historically speaking, women have been associated with madness, be it Medea from Ancient Greece, the...
In Frances Burney and Her Readers, Anna Paluchowska-Messing traces the rugged trajectory marked by t...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Kansas, English, 2007.In her final novel The Wanderer, or Female Diffic...
The novels of Fanny Burney have attracted comment over the years from three disctinct perspectives. ...
Today Fanny Burney’s venture into authorship would not be questionable. She was, after all, a daught...
The female heroes in late eighteenth-century and in nineteenth-century English novels by women are s...
The object of the first chapter is to furnish brief biographies of the four novelists: Fanny Burney,...
This dissertation examines the social landscape of eighteenth-century Britain as one that was especi...
In the eighteenth century male-dominated world of English literature, Frances\ud Burney was one of t...
In the hands of two prominent authors, Elizabeth Inchbald and Frances Burney, a critical paradox con...
The thesis consists of an introduction; two contextualising chapters, the first historical, the seco...
International audienceAs has been largely proved by now, Evelina is more than a simple tea-table nov...
While recent studies often praise Frances Burney’s novels for their irreverent social criticism, man...
Frances Burney's early experiences of performance culture in her father Charles's musical household ...
The late eighteenth-century author Frances Burney is best known for popularizing the “comedy of mann...
Historically speaking, women have been associated with madness, be it Medea from Ancient Greece, the...
In Frances Burney and Her Readers, Anna Paluchowska-Messing traces the rugged trajectory marked by t...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Kansas, English, 2007.In her final novel The Wanderer, or Female Diffic...
The novels of Fanny Burney have attracted comment over the years from three disctinct perspectives. ...
Today Fanny Burney’s venture into authorship would not be questionable. She was, after all, a daught...
The female heroes in late eighteenth-century and in nineteenth-century English novels by women are s...
The object of the first chapter is to furnish brief biographies of the four novelists: Fanny Burney,...
This dissertation examines the social landscape of eighteenth-century Britain as one that was especi...
In the eighteenth century male-dominated world of English literature, Frances\ud Burney was one of t...
In the hands of two prominent authors, Elizabeth Inchbald and Frances Burney, a critical paradox con...
The thesis consists of an introduction; two contextualising chapters, the first historical, the seco...
International audienceAs has been largely proved by now, Evelina is more than a simple tea-table nov...
While recent studies often praise Frances Burney’s novels for their irreverent social criticism, man...
Frances Burney's early experiences of performance culture in her father Charles's musical household ...
The late eighteenth-century author Frances Burney is best known for popularizing the “comedy of mann...
Historically speaking, women have been associated with madness, be it Medea from Ancient Greece, the...
In Frances Burney and Her Readers, Anna Paluchowska-Messing traces the rugged trajectory marked by t...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Kansas, English, 2007.In her final novel The Wanderer, or Female Diffic...