Chase, Karen, and Michael Levenson. The Spectacle of Intimacy: A Public Life for the Victorian Family. Princeton University Press, 2000.
Karen Chase
Standard Name: Chase, Karen
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Literary responses | Sarah Stickney Ellis | SSE
was viewed with ambivalence by a later generation of critics who sought to reclaim women's literature. Sandra Gilbert
and Susan Gubar
, for example, read Ellis as a willing captive in a separate sphere... |
Literary responses | Caroline Norton | Margaret Forster
has written of CN
in Significant Sisters, 1984, as have other historians of Victorian feminism. S. Bailey Sharbutt
compares her favourably to other popular women novelists of her day and argues for... |
Author summary | Sarah Stickney Ellis | The prolific SSE
, author of thirty-four books, was the most popular writer of Victorian conduct literature. Her four advice books addressed women in the burgeoning middle class; she also wrote novels, poems, and didactic... |
Reception | Caroline Norton | The collection sold well and was admired in the fashionable circles in which CN
moved. Critics Karen Chase
and Michael Levenson
surmise that such was the pressure to earn that CNcast aside an ideal... |
Textual Features | Sarah Stickney Ellis | The annual, which appeared only once, was entitled The Missionary; or Christian's New Year's Gift. In SSE
's tale, the eponymous Hindu renounces his religion to become an exemplar of Christian virtue. When he... |
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