Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Features | Sarah Grand | The Heavenly Twins, SG
's most famous novel, treats a variety of social and gender issues, including female sexuality, unhappy marriages, women's social roles, the sexual double standard, and venereal disease. Ideala, heroine of... |
Textual Features | Jane Francesca Lady Wilde | |
Textual Features | Elizabeth Jenkins | She describes how Tennyson, suffering from depression or nervous complaints, turned to Dr James Manby Gully and his celebrated Malvern water cure. She ranks Gully's medical abilities and his record of healing very highly. She... |
Textual Features | May Kendall | Kendall and Lang use the genre of social satire to introduce significant debates between science and the supernatural, of a kind which recur throughout her poetry. These debates are often staged between men and creatures... |
Textual Features | Antoinette Brown Blackwell | ABB
opposes Clarke's argument, and also criticizes Charles Darwin
's and Herbert Spencer
's understanding of the roles of the sexes. She uses the scientific method here, writing in the style of her male contemporaries... |
Textual Features | George Eliot | While there can be no doubt that Dorothea is the heroine of Middlemarch, it is one of the book's major strengths to subsume even the most intensely particular individual life into collective life. The... |
Textual Features | Agnes Maule Machar | In this novel and in one which followed the next year, Lost and Won, AMM
voiced disapproval of novel-reading and its potentially corrupting influence. She preferred an improving tone for fiction and criticized a... |
Textual Features | Mary Somerville | Replete with nearly two hundred illustrations, On Molecular and Microscopic Science is divided into three sections: Atoms and Molecules of Matter, Vegetable Organisms, and Animal Organisms. The text considers the molecular makeup of matter and... |
Textual Features | Charlotte Perkins Gilman | The poem burlesqued social conservatism in the accents of a reform Darwin
ist through the resolution of a prehistoric Eohippus to become a horse (evolution converting his middle finger-nail into a hoof), and of an... |
Textual Features | Charlotte Perkins Gilman | It follows protagonist John Robertson after he awakens from a thirty-year bout of amnesia in 1940. John quickly learns that much has changed in America (particularly the New York City area) since 1910. The... |
Textual Production | Amabel Williams-Ellis | AWE
published an adaptation from the Beagle Expedition narratives of Charles Darwin
and Robert Fitzroy
, written in 1831-36: H.M.S. Beagle in South America. OCLC WorldCat. 1992–1998, http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999. |
Textual Production | Amabel Williams-Ellis | AWE
published Darwin
's Moon: A Biography of Alfred Russel Wallace. It was reprinted in 1986. British Books in Print. J. Whitaker and Sons, 1874–1987. 1967 OCLC WorldCat. 1992–1998, http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999. |
Textual Production | Dorothy Richardson | In her correspondence Richardson addresses a great range of topics, including her own varied reading. She comments on women writers from Julian of Norwich
through Jane Austen
, Emily
and Charlotte Brontë
, George Eliot |
Textual Production | Timberlake Wertenbaker | TW
's play After Darwin, exploring the conflict between naturalist Charles Darwin
and ship's captain Robert Fitzroy
, was produced at Hampstead Theatre
, in London. Morley, Sheridan. “Summer School Is in Session: ’After Darwin’”. International Herald Tribune, 15 July 1998. 1 |
Textual Production | Dorothy Wellesley | DW
's prose works included a discursive and elusive autobiography, and a biography: Sir George Goldie
, Founder of Nigeria, A Memoir. This was, she said, a record of her conversations with Goldie... |
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