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Scenes of Reading

Transforming Romance in Brontë, Eliot, and Woolf

by Nancy Cervetti (Author)
©1998 Others XII, 173 Pages
Series: Writing About Women, Volume 24

Summary

This book combines biography, literature, and cultural and feminist theory to examine the radical critiques of patriarchy performed by Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot, and Virginia Woolf in Jane Eyre, Villette, The Mill on the Floss, The Voyage Out, and Orlando. The book's focus is how these novels revise the romance plot, abandoning this ancient and very political story line and creating in its place a much larger imaginary field in which female heroines as well as their readers can consider and experiment with other possibilities. Strikingly different from the swooning beauties of traditional romance, Jane Eyre, Lucy Snowe, Maggie Tulliver, Rachel Vinrace, and Orlando share a love of language and desire for intellectual expression that takes precedence over marriage and motherhood.

Details

Pages
XII, 173
Year
1998
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820438054
Language
English
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Frankfurt/M., Paris, Wien, 1998. XII, 173 pp.

Biographical notes

Nancy Cervetti (Author)

The Author: Nancy Cervetti has a Ph.D. from the University of Iowa in nineteenth-century British literature and feminist theory. She has published widely in journals including Women's Studies and the Journal of Modern Literature, and she is Director of Women's Studies at Avila College in Kansas City, Missouri.

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Title: Scenes of Reading