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Suffering mothers in mid-Victorian novelsSuffering mothers in mid-Victorian novels

Suffering mothers in mid-Victorian novels1997

Natalie McKnight

About this book

During the Victorian Era, women who became mothers faced unprecedented, unrealistic, and contradictory expectations from mainstream society. These expectations were expressed through a wide range of media including maternal guidebooks, popular periodicals, and Queen Victoria's maternal image. In Suffering Mothers in Mid-Victorian Novels, Natalie McKnight analyzes the influence of such cultural pressures on the fictional portrayals of mothers in mid-Victorian novels. Using a new historical and psychoanalytic approach, McKnight examines the climate created by a society that idolized mothers in theory but in reality positioned them to fail. The novels of Dickens, Charlotte Bronte, Thackeray, and George Eliot are studied for their inclusion of mother characters who vary from the ambivalent to the monstrous, the angelic to the absent. In her thorough exploration of these novels, McKnight reveals the influences and the natures of characters who function more centrally in mid-Victorian fiction than has often been supposed.

Details

First published
1997
OL Work ID
OL3295255W

Subjects

Mothers in literatureHistory and criticismMotherhood in literatureMother and child in literatureWomen and literatureEnglish fictionSuffering in literatureHistorySouffrance dans la littératureHistoireMoedersRomanLiteratureFemmes et littératureLeidLiteratuurMères dans la littératureMutter

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.