Tainted Souls and Painted Faces : The Rhetoric of Fallenness in Victorian Culture /
Furkejuvvon:
Váldodahkki: | |
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Materiálatiipa: | Elektrovnnalaš E-girji |
Giella: | eaŋgalasgiella |
Almmustuhtton: |
Ithaca :
Cornell University Press,
1993.
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Ráidu: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Fáttát: | |
Liŋkkat: | Full text available: |
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Sisdoallologahallan:
- Mid-Victorian conceptions of character, agency, and reform: social science and the "great social evil"
- "The taint the very tale conveyed": self-reading, suspicion, and falleness in Dickens
- Melodrama, morbidity, and unthinking sympathy: Gaskell's Mary Barton and Ruth
- Dramatic monologue in crisis: agency and exchange in G.G. Rossetti's "Jenny"
- Reproduced in finer motions: encouraging the fallen in Barrett Browning's Aurora Leigh
- Afterword: intersubjectivity and the politics of poststructuralism.