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Conrad's Sensational Heroines - Gender and Representation in the Late Fiction of Joseph Conrad (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2017):... Conrad's Sensational Heroines - Gender and Representation in the Late Fiction of Joseph Conrad (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2017)
Ellen Burton Harrington
R2,785 Discovery Miles 27 850 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This volume considers Joseph Conrad's use of multiple genres, including allusions to sensation fiction, pornography, anthropology, and Darwinian science, to respond to Victorian representations of gender in layered and contradictory representations of his own. In his stories and later novels, the familiar writer of sea stories centered on men moves to consider the plight of women and the challenges of renegotiating gender roles in the context of the early twentieth century. Conrad's rich and conflicted consideration of subjectivity and alienation extends to some of his women characters, and his complex use of genre allows him both to prompt and to subvert readers' expectations of popular forms, which typically offer recognizable formulas for gender roles. He frames his critique through familiar sensationalized typologies of women that are demonstrated in his fiction: the violent mother, the murderess, the female suicide, the fallen woman, the adulteress, and the traumatic victim. Considering these figures through the roles and the taxonomies that they simultaneously embody and disrupt, this study exposes internalized patriarchal expectations that Conrad presents as both illegitimate and inescapable.

Scribbling Women and the Short Story Form - Approaches by American and British Women Writers (Paperback, New edition): Ellen... Scribbling Women and the Short Story Form - Approaches by American and British Women Writers (Paperback, New edition)
Ellen Burton Harrington
R1,064 Discovery Miles 10 640 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

"America is now wholly given over to a d - d mob of scribbling women, and I should have no chance of success while the public taste is occupied with their trash..." Taking Hawthorne's famous 1855 complaint about women writers as a starting point for consideration, Scribbling Women and the Short Story Form is a collection of fourteen critical essays about the short fiction of British and American women writers. This anthology takes a feminist approach, examining the liberating possibilities for women writers of the form of the short story, a genre often associated with alienation or subversion (the writer Frank O'Connor describes the form as marginal or "outlaw"). Covering the work of selected women writers from the 1850s through the late twentieth century, this collection includes essays on well-known authors such as Rebecca Harding Davis, Louisa May Alcott, Kate Chopin, Katherine Anne Porter, Flannery O'Connor, Cynthia Ozick, and Ursula K. Le Guin, alongside essays on Harriett Prescott Spofford, Ruth Stewart, L. T. Meade, Alice Dunbar-Nelson, Zitkala-Sa, Sui Sin Far, and Lydia Davis, less-known authors whose stories offer rich ground for consideration.

Conrad's Sensational Heroines - Gender and Representation in the Late Fiction of Joseph Conrad (Paperback, Softcover... Conrad's Sensational Heroines - Gender and Representation in the Late Fiction of Joseph Conrad (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2017)
Ellen Burton Harrington
R2,549 Discovery Miles 25 490 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This volume considers Joseph Conrad's use of multiple genres, including allusions to sensation fiction, pornography, anthropology, and Darwinian science, to respond to Victorian representations of gender in layered and contradictory representations of his own. In his stories and later novels, the familiar writer of sea stories centered on men moves to consider the plight of women and the challenges of renegotiating gender roles in the context of the early twentieth century. Conrad's rich and conflicted consideration of subjectivity and alienation extends to some of his women characters, and his complex use of genre allows him both to prompt and to subvert readers' expectations of popular forms, which typically offer recognizable formulas for gender roles. He frames his critique through familiar sensationalized typologies of women that are demonstrated in his fiction: the violent mother, the murderess, the female suicide, the fallen woman, the adulteress, and the traumatic victim. Considering these figures through the roles and the taxonomies that they simultaneously embody and disrupt, this study exposes internalized patriarchal expectations that Conrad presents as both illegitimate and inescapable.

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