"Good education, good position, and good blood": creole women's literature of the nineteenth-century British West Indies.
Creole women figures in nineteenth-century British fiction are often portrayed as threats to the stability and integrity of English domesticity in both the colony and the metropole. By virtue of the geography of their West Indian birth, these characters are closely associated with the practice of ch...
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20195334 |
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