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"The Girl of the Period, and Other Social Essays" in 2 volumes is a collection of essays upon various social subjects written by the British journalist Eliza Lynn Linton, who was a severe critic of early feminism. Her most famous essay on this matter, The Girl of the Period, was published in Saturday Review in 1868 and was a vehement attack on feminism. Linton is a leading example of the fact that the fight against votes for women was not only organised by men. This carefully crafted e-artnow ebook is formatted for your eReader with a functional and detailed table of contents._x000D_ Volume 1:_x000D_ The Girl of the Period_x000D_ Modern Mothers_x000D_ Modern Mothers_x000D_ Paying One's Shot_x000D_ What is Woman's Work?_x000D_ Little Women_x000D_ Ideal Women_x000D_ Pinchbeck_x000D_ Affronted Womanhood_x000D_ Feminine Affectations_x000D_ Interference_x000D_ The Fashionable Woman_x000D_ Sleeping Dogs_x000D_ Beauty and Brains_x000D_ Nymphs_x000D_ Mésalliances_x000D_ Weak Sisters_x000D_ Pinching Shoes_x000D_ Superior Beings_x000D_ Feminine Amenities_x000D_ Grim Females_x000D_ Mature Sirens_x000D_ Pumpkins_x000D_ Widows_x000D_ Dolls_x000D_ Charming Women_x000D_ Apron-strings_x000D_ Fine Feelings_x000D_ Sphinxes_x000D_ Flirting_x000D_ Scramblers_x000D_ Flattery_x000D_ La Femme Passée_x000D_ Spoilt Women_x000D_ Dovecots_x000D_ Bored Husbands_x000D_ Volume 2:_x000D_ Gushing Men_x000D_ Sweet Seventeen_x000D_ The Habit of Fear_x000D_ Old Ladies_x000D_ Voices_x000D_ Burnt Fingers_x000D_ Désœuvrement_x000D_ The Shrieking Sisterhood_x000D_ Otherwise-minded_x000D_ Limp People_x000D_ The Art of Reticence_x000D_ Men's Favourites_x000D_ Womanliness_x000D_ Something to Worry_x000D_ Sweets of Married Life_x000D_ Social Nomads_x000D_ Great Girls_x000D_ Shunted Dowagers_x000D_ Privileged Persons_x000D_ Modern Man-haters_x000D_ Vague People_x000D_ Arcadia_x000D_ Strangers at Church_x000D_ In Sickness_x000D_ On a Visit_x000D_ Drawing-room Epiphytes_x000D_ The Epicene Sex_x000D_ Women's Men_x000D_ Hotel Life in England_x000D_ Our Masks_x000D_ Heroes at Home_x000D_ Seine-fishing_x000D_ The Discontented Woman_x000D_ English Clergymen in Foreign Watering-places_x000D_ Old Friends_x000D_ Popular Women_x000D_ Choosing or Finding_x000D_ Local Fêtes
Focuses on the work of four Victorian anti-feminist women writers-- Eliza Linton, Charlotte Yonge, Mrs. H. Ward, and Margaret Oliphant-- and asks why, despite their own liberated lifestyles, they publicly opposed the advancement of women. Surveys women's anti- feminist attitudes after Mary Wollstonecraft's death, as well as selections from the novelists' best known works and journalism, examining their construction of gender ideals, criticism of the church, and their antagonism to literary predecessors such as Jane Austin and George Eliot. The author stresses their inconsistencies, and suggests that their novels reveal a strong attraction to the world of work. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
Reviewing Sex: Gender and the Reception of Victorian Novels looks at the influence of Victorian definitions of gender on the cultural processes of reading and canon formation in nineteenth-century England, examining the reception of several mid-century works in over 100 Victorian book reviews. This study investigates four canonical and popular novelists (Emily Bronte, Anthony Trollope, Charles Reade, Charlotte Yonge), all of whom caused high cultural commotions by epitomizing or subverting contemporary definitions of 'masculine' or 'feminine' writing.