Educating Women: Cultural Conflict and Victorian Literature

Educating Women: Cultural Conflict and Victorian Literature

by Laura Morgan Green
Educating Women: Cultural Conflict and Victorian Literature

Educating Women: Cultural Conflict and Victorian Literature

by Laura Morgan Green

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Overview

In 1837, when Queen Victoria came to the throne, no institution of higher education in Britain was open to women. By the end of the century, a quiet revolution had occurred: women had penetrated even the venerable walls of Oxford and Cambridge and could earn degrees at the many new universities founded during Victoria's reign. During the same period, novelists increasingly put intellectually ambitious heroines students, teachers, and frustrated scholars—at the center of their books. Educating Women analyzes the conflict between the higher education movement's emphasis on intellectual and professional achievement and the Victorian novel's continuing dedication to a narrative in which women's success is measured by the achievement of emotional rather than intellectual goals and by the forging of social rather than institutional ties.

Focusing on works by Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot, Anna Leonowens, and Thomas Hardy, Laura Morgan Green demonstrates that those texts are shaped by the need to mediate the conflict between the professionalism and publicity increasingly associated with education, on the one hand, and the Victorian celebration of women as emblems of domesticity, on the other. Educating Women shows that the nineteenth-century “heroines” of both history and fiction were in fact as indebted to domestic ideology as they were eager to transform it.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780821414033
Publisher: Ohio University Press
Publication date: 12/31/2001
Pages: 176
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Laura Morgan Green is an assistant professor in the English department at Northeastern University. She has published articles on Thomas Hardy and George Eliot and has also written for Salon.com and Poets and Writers magazine.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsvii
Introductionix
1Domesticity and Duplicity: The Rhetoric of the Higher Education Movement1
2Living on the Moon: Jane Eyre and the Limits of Self-Education24
3From English Governess to Orientalist Scholar: Female Pedagogy and Power in Anna Leonowens's The English Governess at the Siamese Court46
4"At once narrow and promiscuous": Emily Davies, George Eliot, and Middlemarch70
5"Strange [in]difference of sex": Thomas Hardy and the Temptations of Androgyny101
Notes129
Works Cited141
Index149
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