Features Elizabeth Gaskell's work. This work brings together her journalism, her shorter fiction, which was published in various collections during her lifetime, her early personal writing, including a diary written between 1835 and 1838 when she was a young mother, her five full-length novels and "The Life of Charlotte Bronte".
A selection of texts by Elizabeth Gaskell, accompanied by annotations. It brings together Gaskell academics to provide readers with scholarship on her work and seeks to bring the crusading spirit and genius of the writer into the 21st century to take her place as a major Victorian writer.
Margaret Oliphant (1828-97) had a prolific literary career that spanned almost fifty years. She wrote some 98 novels, fifty or more short stories, twenty-five works of non-fiction, including biographies and historic guides to European cities, and more than three hundred periodical articles. This is the most ambitious critical edition of her work.
Features Elizabeth Gaskell's work. This work brings together her journalism, her shorter fiction, which was published in various collections during her lifetime, her early personal writing, including a diary written between 1835 and 1838 when she was a young mother, her five full-length novels and "The Life of Charlotte Bronte".
Features Elizabeth Gaskell's work. This work brings together her journalism, her shorter fiction, which was published in various collections during her lifetime, her early personal writing, including a diary written between 1835 and 1838 when she was a young mother, her five full-length novels and "The Life of Charlotte Bronte".
A selection of texts by Elizabeth Gaskell, accompanied by annotations. It brings together Gaskell academics to provide readers with scholarship on her work and seeks to bring the crusading spirit and genius of the writer into the 21st century to take her place as a major Victorian writer.
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.
Features Elizabeth Gaskell's work. This work brings together her journalism, her shorter fiction, which was published in various collections during her lifetime, her early personal writing, including a diary written between 1835 and 1838 when she was a young mother, her five full-length novels and "The Life of Charlotte Bronte".
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgements -- General Introduction -- Introduction -- Bibliography -- Abbreviations -- The Diary -- 'On Visiting the Grave of my Stillborn Little Girl' -- 'Sketches among the Poor - No. I' -- 'Clopton Hall' -- 'Cheshire Customs' -- 'Libbie Marsh's Three Eras' -- 'The Sexton's Hero' -- 'Emerson's Lectures' -- 'Christmas Storms and Sunshine' -- 'Hand and Heart' -- 'Martha Preston' -- 'Lizzie Leigh' -- 'The Well of Pen-Morfa' -- 'The Heart of John Middleton' -- 'Disappearances' -- Reviews in the Athenaeum -- 'Bessy's Troubles at Home' -- 'The Schah's English Gardener' -- 'Cumberland Sheep-Shearers' -- 'Traits and Stories of the Huguenots' -- 'Modern Greek Songs' -- 'Company Manners' -- Preface to Mabel Vaughan -- 'An Incident at Niagara Falls' -- Preface to Colonel Vecchj, Garibaldi at Caprera -- 'Shams' -- 'An Italian Institution' -- 'Robert Gould Shaw' -- 'French Life' -- Review of W.T.H. Torrens, Lancashire's Lesson -- Two Fragments of Ghost Stories -- Explanatory Notes -- Textual Notes