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Marriage and Morals Among the Victorians (Paperback, 1st Ivan R. Dee pbk. ed)
Loot Price: R373
Discovery Miles 3 730
You Save: R45
(11%)
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Marriage and Morals Among the Victorians (Paperback, 1st Ivan R. Dee pbk. ed)
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List price R418
Loot Price R373
Discovery Miles 3 730
You Save R45 (11%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In these brilliant essays, Gertrude Himmelfarb, one of America's
most respected scholars of Victorian thought and culture, explores
the many facets, public and private, of the Victorian idea of
morality. Incisively and provocatively she illuminates the "moral
imagination" of the Victorians, "the imagination that treasured the
complexity of the heart and mind and that sought, by aesthetic
means as well as ethical, to adorn and enhance rather than destroy
the 'decent drapery of life.'" The conventional view of
Victorianism-a Family Shakespeare purged of indelicacies, piano
legs sheathed in pantaloons, and the works of male and female
authors chastely residing on separate shelves-gives way to the
subtle and sympathetic analysis of an ethos that combined a
profound sense of social and moral responsibility with a remarkable
tolerance for idiosyncrasy and individuality. Marriage and Morals
Among the Victorians invites us to reconsider the complex and
colorful panorama of ideas and attitudes, beliefs and behavior,
that goes under the name of Victorianism-and it reconsiders well
our own relation to that much abused and misunderstood culture. "An
important book that deserves a wide readership. It deserves to be
read for the critical quality of Miss Himmelfarb's mind and the
constant questioning of fashionable attitudes. One does not have to
agree with her to enjoy the characteristic sharpness of her
writing, or the characteristic breadth of her reading."-New York
Times Book Review. "A collection of extraordinarily intelligent
essays, held together not by a single thread of argument but by the
sustained moral imagination of an acute student of
nineteenth-century life and thought....Miss Himmelfarb's essays
make clear that there was nothing wrong with either the Victorians'
morality or their imaginations."-National Review.
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