That Marian Evans was a professional journalist familiar with the world of publishing by the time she wrote her first fiction is acknowledged universally in critical and biographical accounts of George Eliot’s life. She was, after all, the first woman editor of a leading intellectual quarterly, the Westminster Review. However, little attention has been paid to the actual details of Evans’s editorial work, carried out a decade before the George Eliot persona was invented. This essay argues that Evans’s editorial career provides revealing evidence of an important intervention in the haphazard processes of the professionalization of Victorian women. The 'Character of Editress,' to use Evans’s own expression, signifies both the performance and ...
This essay engages with Margaret Beetham’s ideas about embodiment, disembodiment, and power in relat...
This article is about the profession of authorship in the nineteenth century. More specifically it i...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
THESIS 7504Before she became \u27George Eliot,\u27 Marian Evans worked for over ten years in the per...
This thesis examines the professional identities of three Victorian novelists, George Eliot (1819-18...
\u27We are dominated by Journalism\u27 \u27a really remarkable power\u27, Oscar Wilde observed, not ...
Ella Hepworth Dixon took on the editorship of the monthly magazine the Englishwoman between March an...
This study contributes to current critical discussions about the figure of the Victorian woman journ...
To more fully understand nineteenth-century literary production, literary scholars must consider per...
Mary Ann (Marian) Evans (1819-1880), better known by her pseudonym, George Eliot, keenly understood ...
This study contributes to current critical discussions about the figure of the Victorian woman journ...
The ease by which the "George Eliot" name is appropriated and claimed indicates a fundamental inabil...
When the call for gender diversity in the Shakespearean editorial field first gained strength in the...
The enormous changes wrought in the British newspaper industry during the late nineteenth and early ...
Editing was in many ways well suited to the careers of women of letters in the Victorian period. Edi...
This essay engages with Margaret Beetham’s ideas about embodiment, disembodiment, and power in relat...
This article is about the profession of authorship in the nineteenth century. More specifically it i...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
THESIS 7504Before she became \u27George Eliot,\u27 Marian Evans worked for over ten years in the per...
This thesis examines the professional identities of three Victorian novelists, George Eliot (1819-18...
\u27We are dominated by Journalism\u27 \u27a really remarkable power\u27, Oscar Wilde observed, not ...
Ella Hepworth Dixon took on the editorship of the monthly magazine the Englishwoman between March an...
This study contributes to current critical discussions about the figure of the Victorian woman journ...
To more fully understand nineteenth-century literary production, literary scholars must consider per...
Mary Ann (Marian) Evans (1819-1880), better known by her pseudonym, George Eliot, keenly understood ...
This study contributes to current critical discussions about the figure of the Victorian woman journ...
The ease by which the "George Eliot" name is appropriated and claimed indicates a fundamental inabil...
When the call for gender diversity in the Shakespearean editorial field first gained strength in the...
The enormous changes wrought in the British newspaper industry during the late nineteenth and early ...
Editing was in many ways well suited to the careers of women of letters in the Victorian period. Edi...
This essay engages with Margaret Beetham’s ideas about embodiment, disembodiment, and power in relat...
This article is about the profession of authorship in the nineteenth century. More specifically it i...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...