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Desire and domestic fiction: a political history of the novel

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In this strikingly original treatment of the rise of the novel, Nancy Armstrong argues that the novels and non- fiction written by and for women in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century England paved the way for the rise of the modern English middle class.

Most critical studies of the novel mistakenly locate political power exclusively in the official institutions of state, ignoring the political domain over which women hold authority, which includes courtshippractices, family relations, and the use of leisure time.

To remedy this, Armstrong provides a dual analysis, tracing both the rise of the novel and the evolution of female authority as part of one phenomenon.

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£68.00
Product Details
Oxford University Press
0199879036 / 9780199879038
eBook (EPUB)
26/04/1990
US
English
300 pages
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