The Child Writer from Austen to Woolf
Herausgeber: Alexander, Christine; McMaster, Juliet; Christine, Alexander
The Child Writer from Austen to Woolf
Herausgeber: Alexander, Christine; McMaster, Juliet; Christine, Alexander
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A collection of essays on the juvenilia of famous authors including Austen, the Bront s, George Eliot and Virginia Woolf.
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A collection of essays on the juvenilia of famous authors including Austen, the Bront s, George Eliot and Virginia Woolf.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 336
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. November 2009
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 547g
- ISBN-13: 9780521128384
- ISBN-10: 0521128382
- Artikelnr.: 28517111
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 336
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. November 2009
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 547g
- ISBN-13: 9780521128384
- ISBN-10: 0521128382
- Artikelnr.: 28517111
Part I. Childhood Writings: 1. Introduction Christine Alexander and Juliet
McMaster; 2. Nineteenth-century juvenilia: a survey Christine Alexander; 3.
Play and apprenticeship: the culture of family magazines Christine
Alexander; 4. What Daisy knew: the epistemology of the child writer Juliet
McMaster; 5. Defining and representing literary juvenilia Christine
Alexander; Part II. Individual Authors: 6. Jane Austen, that disconcerting
'Child' Margaret Doody; 7. Endless imitation: Austen's and Byron's
juvenilia Rachel Brownstein; 8. Childhood writings of Elizabeth Barrett
Browning Beverly Taylor; 9. Autobiography and juvenilia: the fractured self
in Charlotte Brontë's early manuscripts Christine Alexander; 10. The child
is parent to the author: Branwell Brontë Victor Neufeldt; 11. Choosing a
model: George Eliot's 'Prentice Hand' Juliet McMaster; 12. Precocity and
the economy of the evangelical self in John Ruskin's juvenilia David C.
Hanson; 13. Louisa May Alcott's juvenilia Daniel Shealy; 14. Dr Arnold's
granddaughter: Mary Augusta Ward Gillian Boughton; 15. New woman, new
boots: Amy Levy as child journalist Naomi Hetherington; 16. An annotated
bibliography of nineteenth-century juvenilia Lesley Peterson and Leslie
Robertson.
McMaster; 2. Nineteenth-century juvenilia: a survey Christine Alexander; 3.
Play and apprenticeship: the culture of family magazines Christine
Alexander; 4. What Daisy knew: the epistemology of the child writer Juliet
McMaster; 5. Defining and representing literary juvenilia Christine
Alexander; Part II. Individual Authors: 6. Jane Austen, that disconcerting
'Child' Margaret Doody; 7. Endless imitation: Austen's and Byron's
juvenilia Rachel Brownstein; 8. Childhood writings of Elizabeth Barrett
Browning Beverly Taylor; 9. Autobiography and juvenilia: the fractured self
in Charlotte Brontë's early manuscripts Christine Alexander; 10. The child
is parent to the author: Branwell Brontë Victor Neufeldt; 11. Choosing a
model: George Eliot's 'Prentice Hand' Juliet McMaster; 12. Precocity and
the economy of the evangelical self in John Ruskin's juvenilia David C.
Hanson; 13. Louisa May Alcott's juvenilia Daniel Shealy; 14. Dr Arnold's
granddaughter: Mary Augusta Ward Gillian Boughton; 15. New woman, new
boots: Amy Levy as child journalist Naomi Hetherington; 16. An annotated
bibliography of nineteenth-century juvenilia Lesley Peterson and Leslie
Robertson.
Part I. Childhood Writings: 1. Introduction Christine Alexander and Juliet
McMaster; 2. Nineteenth-century juvenilia: a survey Christine Alexander; 3.
Play and apprenticeship: the culture of family magazines Christine
Alexander; 4. What Daisy knew: the epistemology of the child writer Juliet
McMaster; 5. Defining and representing literary juvenilia Christine
Alexander; Part II. Individual Authors: 6. Jane Austen, that disconcerting
'Child' Margaret Doody; 7. Endless imitation: Austen's and Byron's
juvenilia Rachel Brownstein; 8. Childhood writings of Elizabeth Barrett
Browning Beverly Taylor; 9. Autobiography and juvenilia: the fractured self
in Charlotte Brontë's early manuscripts Christine Alexander; 10. The child
is parent to the author: Branwell Brontë Victor Neufeldt; 11. Choosing a
model: George Eliot's 'Prentice Hand' Juliet McMaster; 12. Precocity and
the economy of the evangelical self in John Ruskin's juvenilia David C.
Hanson; 13. Louisa May Alcott's juvenilia Daniel Shealy; 14. Dr Arnold's
granddaughter: Mary Augusta Ward Gillian Boughton; 15. New woman, new
boots: Amy Levy as child journalist Naomi Hetherington; 16. An annotated
bibliography of nineteenth-century juvenilia Lesley Peterson and Leslie
Robertson.
McMaster; 2. Nineteenth-century juvenilia: a survey Christine Alexander; 3.
Play and apprenticeship: the culture of family magazines Christine
Alexander; 4. What Daisy knew: the epistemology of the child writer Juliet
McMaster; 5. Defining and representing literary juvenilia Christine
Alexander; Part II. Individual Authors: 6. Jane Austen, that disconcerting
'Child' Margaret Doody; 7. Endless imitation: Austen's and Byron's
juvenilia Rachel Brownstein; 8. Childhood writings of Elizabeth Barrett
Browning Beverly Taylor; 9. Autobiography and juvenilia: the fractured self
in Charlotte Brontë's early manuscripts Christine Alexander; 10. The child
is parent to the author: Branwell Brontë Victor Neufeldt; 11. Choosing a
model: George Eliot's 'Prentice Hand' Juliet McMaster; 12. Precocity and
the economy of the evangelical self in John Ruskin's juvenilia David C.
Hanson; 13. Louisa May Alcott's juvenilia Daniel Shealy; 14. Dr Arnold's
granddaughter: Mary Augusta Ward Gillian Boughton; 15. New woman, new
boots: Amy Levy as child journalist Naomi Hetherington; 16. An annotated
bibliography of nineteenth-century juvenilia Lesley Peterson and Leslie
Robertson.