Bazaar Literature
Bazaar Literature
Charity, Advocacy, and Parody in Victorian Social Reform Fiction
Thorne-Murphy, Leslee
Oxford University Press
12/2022
288
Dura
Inglês
9780192866882
15 a 20 dias
Section 1
Bazaar Discourse
1: "A Booth in Vanity Fair": Charity Bazaars and the Methods of Fiction
2: Sites of Civil Society: The Bazaar Woman in a Mimic Market
Section 2
Literature at the Bazaar
3: Fair Value: The 1845 Anti-Corn Law League Bazaar and Harriet Martineau's Dawn Island
4: "In My Broken Heart's Disdain": Sentimental Disengagement and Religious Parody in Elizabeth Barrett Browning's "The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim's Point"
Section 3
Fictional Bazaars
5: Bazaar Authorship: Fiction and Philanthropy in Charlotte M. Yonge's The Daisy Chain and The Three Brides
6: Myth and Revelation: Maggie as Bazaar Woman in George Eliot's Mill on the Floss
7: Un)Truthful Narration: Flirtation and Predation in Frances Trollope's The Vicar of Wrexhill and Anthony Trollope's Miss Mackenzie
Conclusion
Fancy Fair or Nonesuch Bazaar?
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Section 1
Bazaar Discourse
1: "A Booth in Vanity Fair": Charity Bazaars and the Methods of Fiction
2: Sites of Civil Society: The Bazaar Woman in a Mimic Market
Section 2
Literature at the Bazaar
3: Fair Value: The 1845 Anti-Corn Law League Bazaar and Harriet Martineau's Dawn Island
4: "In My Broken Heart's Disdain": Sentimental Disengagement and Religious Parody in Elizabeth Barrett Browning's "The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim's Point"
Section 3
Fictional Bazaars
5: Bazaar Authorship: Fiction and Philanthropy in Charlotte M. Yonge's The Daisy Chain and The Three Brides
6: Myth and Revelation: Maggie as Bazaar Woman in George Eliot's Mill on the Floss
7: Un)Truthful Narration: Flirtation and Predation in Frances Trollope's The Vicar of Wrexhill and Anthony Trollope's Miss Mackenzie
Conclusion
Fancy Fair or Nonesuch Bazaar?
Notes
Bibliography
Index