Welcome to our book review site go-pdf.online!

You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.

Sign up

Elizabeth Gaskell’s Smaller Stories
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 198

Elizabeth Gaskell’s Smaller Stories

This book re-locates Elizabeth Gaskell’s ‘smaller stories’ in the literary and cultural context of the nineteenth century. While Gaskell is recognised as one of the major novelists of her time, the short stories that make up a large proportion of her published work have not yet received the critical attention they deserve. This study re-claims them as an indispensable part of her literary output that enables us to better contextualize and assess her achievement holistically as a highly-skilled woman of letters. The periodicals in which Gaskell’s shorter pieces were published offer a microcosm of nineteenth-century society, and Gaskell took full advantage of the medium to apply a consistent and barbed challenge to cultural and gendered constructs of roles and social behaviour. Although her eminently readable prose still flows easily in her short stories, it is less likely to elide the sharp corners of domestic violence, the disabling experiences of women, the pain of death and loss, and the complications of family life.

The Meanings of Home in Elizabeth Gaskell's Fiction
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 236

The Meanings of Home in Elizabeth Gaskell's Fiction

In this beautifully written study, Carolyn Lambert explores the ways in which Elizabeth Gaskell challenges the nineteenth-century cultural construct of the home as a domestic sanctuary offering protection from the external world. Gaskell’s fictional homes often fail to provide a place of safety: doors and windows are ambiguous openings through which death can enter, and are potent signifiers of entrapment as well as protective barriers. The underlying fragility of Gaskell’s concept of home is illustrated by her narratives of homelessness, a state she uses to represent psychological, social, and emotional separation. By drawing on novels, letters and non-fiction writings, Lambert shows how Gaskell’s detailed descriptions of domestic interiors allow for nuanced and unconventional interpretations of character and behaviour, and evince a complex understanding of the significance of home for the construction of identity, gender and sexuality. Lambert’s Gaskell is an outsider whose own dilemmas and conflicts are reflected in the intricate and multi-faceted portrayals of home in her fiction.

The Judiciary
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 233

The Judiciary

A memoir that:-spans from December 2006 to May 2011;-describes the author's struggle against an 'alleged' constructive dismissal by one of Ireland's top law firms;-tells of the author's challenge to the Employment Appeals Tribunal to remain impartial;-outlines the author's application to the Legal Aid Board to provide assistance;-questions the validity of the Courts Service Strategic Plan, the internal systems and the treatment of people who cannot afford legal counsel; and-gives an account of the author's challenge to the Law Courts when she self-represented in the Appeal against the Firm.

Frances Trollope
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 230

Frances Trollope

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2020-01-31
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

By the standards of any age, Frances (Fanny) Trollope was an extraordinary woman who led an extraordinary life. She did not begin writing until she was 53, but in the 24 years between 1832 and 1856 she produced no fewer than 40 books, comprising 150 volumes. E impulse was to save her family from financial ruin. / The Mother of the novelist Anthony Trollope, she was born at Stapleton near Bristol on 10 March 1779. / She drew unashamedly on her own experiences, the people she met on her travels and her large circle of friends and acquaintances to produce her copious range of novels and travel books. She was prolific, critically well-received and very popular. It is puzzling to know why she has apparently been marginalised and largely over-looked, particularly given the radical and controversial nature of much of her writing, combined with her unerring eye for the pretentious, exuberant comic sense, and sardonic wit. This book exposes the reasons for Trollope's unjustified neglect and seeks to give her the recognition she deserves.

Ireland's Empire
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 583

Ireland's Empire

Examines the complex relationship between Roman Catholicism and the global Irish diaspora in the nineteenth century for the first time.

Tying the Knot
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 299

Tying the Knot

Analyses marriage law's development since 1836-its complexity, failures to respond to societal change, and constraints on different beliefs.

Art In Odd Places: Sign
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 158

Art In Odd Places: Sign

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: Unknown
  • -
  • Publisher: Lulu.com

None

Literary Illumination
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 251

Literary Illumination

Literary Illumination examines the relationship between literature and artificial illumination, demonstrating that developments of lighting technology during the nineteenth century definitively altered the treatment of light as symbol, metaphor and textual motif. Correspondingly, the book also engages with the changing nature of darkness, and how the influence of artificial light altered both public perceptions of, and behaviour within, darkness, as well as examining literary chiaroscuros. Within each of four main chapters dedicated to the analysis of a single dominant light source in the long nineteenth-century – firelight, candlelight, gaslight, and electric light – the author considers the phenomenological properties of the light sources, and where their presence would be felt most strongly in the nineteenth century, before collating a corpus of texts for each light source and environment.

Elizabeth Gaskell's Smaller Stories
  • Language: en

Elizabeth Gaskell's Smaller Stories

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2021
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

"This is an engaging and insightful study. Highly polished and well argued, it affords a deeply researched and welcome perspective on Gaskell's short stories as an oblique and creative critique of 19th century society - and of Gaskell as literary stylist." -Felicity James, Associate Professor in Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Literature, University of Leicester "For its illuminating close readings of Gaskell's lesser-known short pieces, for its reappraisal of Gaskell as a more passionate and angrier writer than has previously be acknowledged, and for its knowledgeable exposition of her creative and professional processes, not to mention her personal and religious motivations, this is an i...

Prentiss County, Mississippi
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 707

Prentiss County, Mississippi

The history of Prentiss County, Mississippi, including the people and families, buildings, businesses, churches, organizations, schools and and sports.