The death of virtue: Charlotte Dacre's critique of ideals of the feminine

At the turn of the nineteenth century in England, the Gothic novel was extremely popular for its stories of ghosts, mysterious circumstances and of course, the “damsel in distress”. These novels depicted such women as virtuous heroines, women whose chastity, perseverance in the face of adversity (of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Viegas-Monchamp, Tania
Other Authors: Perkins, Pam (English)
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/218
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.anitoba.ca-dspace#1993-218
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.anitoba.ca-dspace#1993-2182013-01-11T13:31:12ZPerkins, Pam (English)Viegas-Monchamp, Tania2006-03-20T20:28:58Z2006-03-20T20:28:58Z2006-03-20T20:28:58Zhttp://hdl.handle.net/1993/218At the turn of the nineteenth century in England, the Gothic novel was extremely popular for its stories of ghosts, mysterious circumstances and of course, the “damsel in distress”. These novels depicted such women as virtuous heroines, women whose chastity, perseverance in the face of adversity (often brought about by a threatening male figure) and innocence made them models for female readers. However, such depictions of female virtue encouraged readers to associate positive female behaviour with suffering. Charlotte Dacre choose to challenge these beliefs by writing about heroines who attempted to understand and control their sexuality and their lives, regardless of societal mores. However, while Dacre writes of such women, her heroines always end up punished in some way, condemned to a life apart from the outside world by being shut away in convents, or succumbing to death. Comparing Dacre’s work to novels by Ann Radcliffe and Matthew Lewis reveals her important contribution to English literature from a feminist perspective; however, it is conceded here that Dacre ultimately cannot envision women who can free themselves from accepted beliefs of virtue. Her heroines’ destinies seem the same as those of her contemporaries: to suffer. Still, her courage in writing about such heroines makes her a remarkable writer, and important to a feminist study of Gothic literature.281474 bytesapplication/pdfen_USGothicCharlotte DacreRosa MatildafeministThe death of virtue: Charlotte Dacre's critique of ideals of the feminineElectronic Thesis or DissertationEnglishSt. Martin, Armelle (French, Spanish and Italian) Perkins, Pam (English) Austin-Smith, Brenda (English)Master of Arts (M.A.)February 2006
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Gothic
Charlotte Dacre
Rosa Matilda
feminist
spellingShingle Gothic
Charlotte Dacre
Rosa Matilda
feminist
Viegas-Monchamp, Tania
The death of virtue: Charlotte Dacre's critique of ideals of the feminine
description At the turn of the nineteenth century in England, the Gothic novel was extremely popular for its stories of ghosts, mysterious circumstances and of course, the “damsel in distress”. These novels depicted such women as virtuous heroines, women whose chastity, perseverance in the face of adversity (often brought about by a threatening male figure) and innocence made them models for female readers. However, such depictions of female virtue encouraged readers to associate positive female behaviour with suffering. Charlotte Dacre choose to challenge these beliefs by writing about heroines who attempted to understand and control their sexuality and their lives, regardless of societal mores. However, while Dacre writes of such women, her heroines always end up punished in some way, condemned to a life apart from the outside world by being shut away in convents, or succumbing to death. Comparing Dacre’s work to novels by Ann Radcliffe and Matthew Lewis reveals her important contribution to English literature from a feminist perspective; however, it is conceded here that Dacre ultimately cannot envision women who can free themselves from accepted beliefs of virtue. Her heroines’ destinies seem the same as those of her contemporaries: to suffer. Still, her courage in writing about such heroines makes her a remarkable writer, and important to a feminist study of Gothic literature. === February 2006
author2 Perkins, Pam (English)
author_facet Perkins, Pam (English)
Viegas-Monchamp, Tania
author Viegas-Monchamp, Tania
author_sort Viegas-Monchamp, Tania
title The death of virtue: Charlotte Dacre's critique of ideals of the feminine
title_short The death of virtue: Charlotte Dacre's critique of ideals of the feminine
title_full The death of virtue: Charlotte Dacre's critique of ideals of the feminine
title_fullStr The death of virtue: Charlotte Dacre's critique of ideals of the feminine
title_full_unstemmed The death of virtue: Charlotte Dacre's critique of ideals of the feminine
title_sort death of virtue: charlotte dacre's critique of ideals of the feminine
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/218
work_keys_str_mv AT viegasmonchamptania thedeathofvirtuecharlottedacrescritiqueofidealsofthefeminine
AT viegasmonchamptania deathofvirtuecharlottedacrescritiqueofidealsofthefeminine
_version_ 1716574869381971968