Weathering Challenges to the Separate Sphere Ideology: The Persistence of Convention in Victorian Novels, 1850-1901
The separate sphere ideology, dominant but never hegemonic in Victorian Britain, dictated that women’s natural vocation was to be wives and mothers. Between the years 1850 to 1901, the surplus woman problem and a nascent feminist movement challenged the separate sphere ideology. It was also reinfor...
Main Author: | Khan, Scheherazade |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Craig, Béatrice |
Format: | Others |
Language: | en |
Published: |
Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
2021
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10393/42671 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-26891 |
Similar Items
-
Orientalism and the British Picture Postcard Industry: Popularizing the Empire in Victorian and Edwardian Homes
by: Gilles Teulié
Published: (2019-06-01) -
Fashioning Mobility: Navigating Space in Victorian Fiction
by: Jones, Mary C.
Published: (2015) -
The company man: colonial agents and the idea of the virtuous empire, 1786-1901
by: Kent, Eddy
Published: (2008) -
The company man: colonial agents and the idea of the virtuous empire, 1786-1901
by: Kent, Eddy
Published: (2008) -
The company man: colonial agents and the idea of the virtuous empire, 1786-1901
by: Kent, Eddy
Published: (2008)