Readers and mistresses
Kept women in Victorian literature
By Katie R. Peel
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Click Here to Buy from Your Preferred BooksellerBook Information
- Format: Hardcover
- Pages: 232
- Price: £85.00
- Published Date: September 2024
- Series: Interventions: Rethinking the Nineteenth Century
Description
Readers and Mistresses: Kept Women in Victorian Literature identifies kept mistresses in British Victorian narrative and offers ways to understand their experiences. The author discusses kept women characters in Charles Dickens' Oliver Twist, Elizabeth Gaskell's Mary Barton and Ruth, Anne Brontë's The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, and George Eliot's Daniel Deronda, and examines the methods their authors use to encourage reader empathy. This book also usefully demonstrates how to identify kept women when they are less visible in texts, including in Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre, Dickens' Hard Times and Dombey and Son, and George Gissing's The Odd Women.
Contents
Introduction: '"I am my own mistress"': Kept women in Victorian literature
1 Old, particular, fallen, mustachioed, and queer: Other kept women
2 The women who did (and the men who did not)
3 Wives and mistresses in Anne Brontë's The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
4 Marian Evans' story: The kept woman in Daniel Deronda
5 Near mis(tres)ses: Narrative potential v. dead ends
Conclusion: 'Conventionality is not morality'
References
Index
Author
Katie R. Peel is Professor of English at the University of North Carolina Wilmington