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Women and Domestic Experience in Victorian Political Fiction
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Book Code: GM1634
ISBN: 0-313-31634-1
ISBN-13: 978-0-313-31634-0
192 pages
Greenwood Press
Publication: 2/28/2001
List Price: $110.95 (UK Sterling Price: £65.00)
Availability: Out of stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Series Title: Contributions in Women's Studies
Series Number: 186
Reviews:
  • [t]he interest of the volume lies in its analysis of the interpenetration of the domestic and the political in other Victorian fiction.
    —Dickens Quarterly
    June 2003
  • ...challenges not only received wisdom regarding "seperate spheres" in Victorian ideology, but also reigning conceptions of liberalism as those inform both criticism of the Victorian novel and current political theory....This is a subtle, careful, yet provocative engagement with both literary history and political theory; it deserves to be recognized as a forceful challenge to received wisdom on both fronts.
    —SEL Studies in English Literature 1500-1900
    Autumn 2001
Description: Recent revisions of the idea of "separate spheres," which governed Victorian scholarship of the past two decades, have provoked considerable interest in both domestic and political fiction of the period and in the political dimensions of domestic life. This book challenges arguments about the division of the political from other fictional genres and divisions of the private from the public sphere. It shows that Victorian literature identified the household as the space in which the political rights-bearer came into being. While some thinkers maintained that the rights-bearer is defined by purely formal reasoning, this volume claims that Locke and other educational writers conceived reason as embodying emotion. It looks at works by Mary Wollstonecraft, Amelia Opie, Maria Edgeworth, Elizabeth Gaskell, and Charles Dickens to reveal how the emotional relations of the household shaped the political self and how women gained identity as rights-bearers. The book argues that the intimate space of the household does not exist separately from public, political, and economic domains. It revises generic understandings of political fiction and shows that domestic plots are integral to political plots. This is so because domestic fiction focuses on the cultivation of the liberal self in the household and the disclosure of that self in terms of its vision of the good. The volume concludes that domestic space is the foundation of liberal polity, and that an account of the household in which the liberal self is disclosed is at the heart of both Victorian political fiction and philosophy.
Table of Contents:
  • Preface
  • Introduction: Political Fictions, Domestic Plots
  • Calling the Question
  • Visions of the Daughters of Albion
  • Revisions
  • Intimate Space: The Household and the Polity in Domestic Fiction
  • "We too are men": Enacting Revolution in North and South
  • The Economy of the Household: Liberalism and Intimate Space in Dickens and John Stuart Mill
  • Conclusion: Household Reasons and Political Subjects
LC Card Number: 00-034114
LCC Class: PR868
Dewey Class: 823
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