Edith Wharton
Katherine Joslin(Author)
Palgrave Macmillan (Publisher)
Published on 24. May 1991
Book
Hardback
164 pages
978-0-333-40729-5 (ISBN)
Description
19th century American writers often differ by gender in the stories they tell about the American experience. The male quest most often depicts the hero's journey away from the domestic world of women; the female quest situates the heroine within the domestic world of marriage and motherhood. This study considers Edith Wharton's fiction in opposition to both the male pastoral romance and the female domestic novel. Like other American women writers, Wharton places her protagonists within the social, domestic world. Unlike male romancers who celebrate escape from society, she depicts the inevitable bond or covenant between the individual and the group. Wharton differs, however, from the female novelists who celebrate domesticity by emphasizing the bonds or restrictions the group imposes on the individual.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Basingstoke
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 186 mm
Width: 123 mm
Weight
157 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-333-40729-5 (9780333407295)
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Content
Acknowledgements - Editor's Preface - Edith Wharton's Life - Edith Wharton's Fiction - The House of Mirth and the Question of Women - The Custom of the Country and the Atlantic's Call - The Age of Innocence and the Bohemian Peril - The Mother's Recompense: Spectral Desire - Edith Wharton and the Critics - Notes - Bibliography