Non-Fiction Books:

Language of Gender and Class

Transformation in the Victorian Novel
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Hardback
$422.00
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Description

In this lucid and cogently argued work, Patricia Ingham examines in detail the widely accepted critical cliche "Examining the representation of gender always involves investigating the representation of class". Using historical material about class', she re-examines six major Victorian novels. Focusing upon language, she explores how stereotypes of gender and class encode cultural myths that reinforce the social status quo. However, The Language of Gender and Class demonstrates that none of the novelists, either male or female, completely accepts either the stereotyped figures or the authorized story. The figures of the Angel and the Whore are reassessed and modified in Ingham's in-depth reading of the novels. The result is that the treatment of gender is by the 1890s released from its task of containing neutralising class conflict. New accounts of femininity can begin to emerge. This highly original and unprecedented work will provoke debate and encourage students and scholars in literary, linguistic and gender studies to rethink their views on the Victorian novel.

Author Biography:

Patricia Ingham is Fellow in English at St Anne's College, Oxford, and Times Lecturer in English Language. She has developed what is recognised as an original linguistic model of criticism already used illuminatingly in her previous works, which include Thomas Hardy: A Feminist Reading (1989) and Dickens, Women and Language (1992).
Release date NZ
April 4th, 1996
Audience
  • Tertiary Education (US: College)
Pages
208
Dimensions
140x216x16
ISBN-13
9780415082211
Product ID
2308204

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