"While We Must Suffer, We Must Not Rebel:" The Calvinist Framework of Susan Warner's The Wide, Wide World
According to Barbara Welter, religion or piety was at the heart of a “true” woman’s cardinal attributes. This “peculiar susceptibility” to religion, reportedly bestowed upon women by God Himself, blessed them with an intrinsic virtuosity and, in so doing, appointed them as the bastions of morality w...
Main Author: | Simona Porro |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures at the University of Verona
2016-12-01
|
Series: | Iperstoria |
Online Access: | https://iperstoria.it/article/view/386 |
Similar Items
-
Sentimental Discipline: A Narratological Analysis of Susan Warner's The Wide, Wide World
by: Elif ÖZTABAK AVCI
Published: (2017-12-01) -
We Must Be Dreaming
by: David Bert Joris Dhert
Published: (2018-05-01) -
Our students don’t write. We must worry or we must take on it?
by: Pilar Mirely Chois-Lenis
Published: (2012-09-01) -
Our students don’t write. We must worry or we must take on it?
by: Pilar Mirely Chois-Lenis
Published: (2012-09-01) -
If we look for timelessness in architecture, we must look to tradition
by: Clive Aslet
Published: (2020-11-01)