For centuries, humans have had a desire to classify everything, including themselves. Society is organized into a system of classes, rules, and conventions. But, how true or false is this system? Elizabeth Gaskell, a social novelist, seems to address this in her novel North and South. Reviewing the novel, looking at characters and class relations within it, and finding whether or not it fits into a Marxist system and theory like Louis Althusser’s reveals Gaskell’s statement. Where does the system hold true? Where does it become problematized? Arguably, the system holds true for characters who are dedicated to their class. Then, it becomes problematized with other characters, especially the protagonist, Margaret, who are not fully dedicated ...
Resumen: El presente trabajo tiene por objeto el estudio de la novela North and South (1855) escrit...
The article examines the work of cartography in the 1854/5 Gaskell novel North and South, which has ...
Existing criticism that addresses the concept of Englishness in Elizabeth Gaskell’s writing is spars...
Critical attention to Elizabeth Gaskell's novel North and South (1854-55), and to nineteenth-century...
Elizabeth Gaskell uses physical settings, ranging from whole towns to individual interior details, t...
Building on previous feminist literary criticism of Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South (1854-55), t...
Gaskell's 1855 novel North and South represents an important departure from her earlier works, which...
An overview of the literary evolution of Elizabeth Gaskell throughout Mary Barton, North and South, ...
In this paper, I examine the issue of social justice in Elizabeth Gaskell\u27s three novels Ruth, Ma...
This thesis is basically a study of binary oppositions on Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South in whi...
Mrs. Elizabeth Gaskell’s North and South (1854), a condition of England novel projects the rise of i...
North and South is a social novel written by Elizabeth Gaskell. She describes the life situation and...
Both contemporary and modern critics recognize the industrial, regional, and personal conflicts in N...
2-s2.0-85102876520Elizabeth Gaskell’s North and South (1855) portrays the “Condition-of-England-Ques...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 64-67).This thesis looks at blatant and subversive performan...
Resumen: El presente trabajo tiene por objeto el estudio de la novela North and South (1855) escrit...
The article examines the work of cartography in the 1854/5 Gaskell novel North and South, which has ...
Existing criticism that addresses the concept of Englishness in Elizabeth Gaskell’s writing is spars...
Critical attention to Elizabeth Gaskell's novel North and South (1854-55), and to nineteenth-century...
Elizabeth Gaskell uses physical settings, ranging from whole towns to individual interior details, t...
Building on previous feminist literary criticism of Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South (1854-55), t...
Gaskell's 1855 novel North and South represents an important departure from her earlier works, which...
An overview of the literary evolution of Elizabeth Gaskell throughout Mary Barton, North and South, ...
In this paper, I examine the issue of social justice in Elizabeth Gaskell\u27s three novels Ruth, Ma...
This thesis is basically a study of binary oppositions on Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South in whi...
Mrs. Elizabeth Gaskell’s North and South (1854), a condition of England novel projects the rise of i...
North and South is a social novel written by Elizabeth Gaskell. She describes the life situation and...
Both contemporary and modern critics recognize the industrial, regional, and personal conflicts in N...
2-s2.0-85102876520Elizabeth Gaskell’s North and South (1855) portrays the “Condition-of-England-Ques...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 64-67).This thesis looks at blatant and subversive performan...
Resumen: El presente trabajo tiene por objeto el estudio de la novela North and South (1855) escrit...
The article examines the work of cartography in the 1854/5 Gaskell novel North and South, which has ...
Existing criticism that addresses the concept of Englishness in Elizabeth Gaskell’s writing is spars...