Victorian Women in Literature
Victorian Women in Literature
Author(s): May SrayisahSubject(s): Theory of Literature
Published by: Editura Universitaria Craiova
Keywords: emancipation; female characters; feminism; Victorianism; women writers;
Summary/Abstract: Many authors began to write about the sufferings and endurances of women in the Victorian Age. More and more novels focused heavily on traditional, typical Victorian female characters and their interactions. As to the movement for the emancipation of woman from the unjust burdens and disabilities to which the five authors made it a subject to reveal the benign qualities of woman, Hardy, Thackeray, Gaskell, Trollope and George Eliot also focused the condition of woman, besides Charles Dickens and the Brontë sisters – with a remarkable account of the social institutions of Victorian London. This does not mean that those novelists held feminist ideas, they simply he wanted to give woman her feminine privileges and rights. This study aims to explore most important Victorian writers who wrote about woman to seek the accuracy of Victorian views towards women. Charles Dickens was a pioneer in dealing with the kind of woman that was identified in that era. We also include Thomas Hardy and Charlotte Brontë who had different ideas in this point.
Journal: Revista de Științe Politice. Revue des Sciences Politiques
- Issue Year: 2017
- Issue No: 54
- Page Range: 141-150
- Page Count: 10
- Language: English