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Showing 46 to 60 of 66 results Save | Export
Intercom, 1976
A case study designed to provide a picture of sex stereotypes in Europe and America before and after the industrial revolution. Qualities most often exhibited and admired by Victorian men and women are described. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Case Studies, European History, Females, Industrialization
Miller, J. Hillis – Stud Engl Lit, 1970
Part I of this review appeared in the Fall 1969 issue. The concluding part discusses some fifty volumes on Victorian literature received between September 1968 and September 1969. (DS)
Descriptors: Book Reviews, English Literature, Letters (Correspondence), Literary Criticism
LaRou, Mary K. – 1989
This paper examines how the attitudes toward Victorian literature have changed through the years. After a brief introductory section, the paper presents a chronological bibliography of 44 general and specific anthologies dealing with Victorian literature, followed by detailed annotations for eight anthologies. Next, some observations of the shift…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Anthologies, Attitude Change, Authors
Schmitt, Elizabeth W. B. – 1991
In her novel "Work," through the character of Rachel and her story, Louise May Alcott confronts many of the issues facing both "fallen" women and the social reformers of her day. Rachel, one of the sisterhood of the fallen, becomes an instrument of social reform after having been the victim of the sham respectability of her…
Descriptors: College English, Females, Higher Education, Social Action
Watt, Ian, Comp. – 1973
This bibliography is intended as a convenient guide to scholarship in the field of Victorian fiction for graduate and advanced undergraduate students. The listings are selective, with emphasis on critical works published in the twentieth century. Contents include a preface explaining the guide, followed by the main sections: "Bibliographies,…
Descriptors: Bibliographies, English Literature, Fiction, Graduate Study
Hewitt, Douglas – 1972
This book considers the right and the wrong ways to approach different types of novels. Trollope's "The Way We Live Now" is the starting point for chapters dealing with the conventions of realism as they are revealed in the presentation of characters, in the novelists' language, and in the tension between the autonomy of character and the demands…
Descriptors: Characterization, English, Language Usage, Literary Criticism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Dunlop, Rishma – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 2002
The author's doctoral dissertation started out as qualitative research--interviews with beginning women teachers exploring the transition from teacher education into the classroom. She explains why the material could be better conveyed in the form of the bildungsroman, a German term for a novel of formation or education. Chapter five of the…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Doctoral Dissertations, Educational Research, Fiction
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Merchant, Peter – Children's Literature in Education, 1989
Reviews literature from the first quarter of the nineteenth-century Victorian period. Examines how several Victorian novelists constructed new kinds of heroic stories, combining moral instruction with dynamic storytelling for their young audience. (MG)
Descriptors: Authors, Characterization, Childrens Literature, Elementary Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Poster, Carol – Feminist Teacher, 1997
Argues that there are special problems associated with designing and teaching a course about authors outside of the literary canon. Traces the development of a course on Victorian women writers from initial development difficulties to final thoughts on restructuring the syllabus. Notes works used in the course. (DSK)
Descriptors: Course Content, Curriculum Development, Feminism, Gender Issues
Buckley, Jerome H., Comp. – 1966
Intended as a guide to scholarship on Victorian writers, this selective bibliography covers all of the major figures and a substantial representation of the lesser ones. It excludes writers and works of fiction, except as such writers are essayists or poets. Omitted are unpublished theses and dissertations, most non-English articles and…
Descriptors: Anthologies, Authors, Bibliographies, Biographies
Peterson, Linda H. – 1990
By examining two autobiographies by Victorian women, the role of editors in the composing and publishing of autobiographical texts can be explored, and questions can be raised about the way personal writing is assigned, edited, and evaluated in classrooms today. The autobiography of Margaret Oliphant, a prolific Victorian novelist and critic, was…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Editing, Editors, Females
Edwards, Suzanne O. – 1987
Because of its wide range of justifiable interpretations, Thomas Hardy's "Tess of the d'Urbervilles" is an appropriate novel to use to help students become better critical readers. Scholarly criticism continues to debate the topic of Tess's character, yet recent feminist and deconstructionist approaches, as well as recently published…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Literary Criticism, Literary Devices, Nineteenth Century Literature
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Smith, Jonathan – Computers and the Humanities, 1996
Describes the use of George P. Landow's hypertext, "The Dickens Web," in an advanced undergraduate literature class and analyzes its practical and theoretical implications. Debates some of Landow's claims about the ease with which learning from hypertext occurs and examines difficulties encountered in using hypertext in the classroom. (DSK)
Descriptors: Computer Software, Computer Uses in Education, Cooperative Learning, Educational Technology
Bump, Jerome – 1995
In teaching, instruction can focus on literary works as storehouses of emotion that can serve as models of how to communicate emotions to the self and others. To help students identify and articulate what they feel as they read Victorian novels, one instructor asked students to record their emotions in a journal divided with quotes on one side of…
Descriptors: Bibliotherapy, Emotional Development, Higher Education, Humanistic Education
Piper, Henry Dan – 1977
From colonial days onward, colloquial speech was looked down on as inappropriate for serious writing, but with the publication of "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," American colloquial style was raised to the level of high art. English teachers should encourage students to build on their own colloquial speech in their writing, rather…
Descriptors: Black History, Black Literature, Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction
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