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A detailed analysis of the narration of working-class women's lives in social prose by Ernst Dronke, Adolf Glassbrenner, Louise Otto, Georg Weerth and Ernst Willkomm reveals that in most instances, behind a veil of socio-historical details, there lies an ideal, universal notion of womanhood that revolves around children, the home, and religion. This realization has important ramifications for the understanding of social prose as a genre, as well as for the reinforcement and universalization of bourgeois gender roles in mid-nineteenth-century Germany.

Produktbeschreibung
A detailed analysis of the narration of working-class women's lives in social prose by Ernst Dronke, Adolf Glassbrenner, Louise Otto, Georg Weerth and Ernst Willkomm reveals that in most instances, behind a veil of socio-historical details, there lies an ideal, universal notion of womanhood that revolves around children, the home, and religion. This realization has important ramifications for the understanding of social prose as a genre, as well as for the reinforcement and universalization of bourgeois gender roles in mid-nineteenth-century Germany.
Autorenporträt
The Author: Helen G. Morris-Keitel received her Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Since 1991 she has been an assistant professor of German at Bucknell University. Her other publications include essays on Friedrich Engels and the problems of humor and satire in the West German Volksstück of the 1980s.