The brother-sister culture in nineteenth-century literature : from Austen to Woolf
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Bibliographic Information
The brother-sister culture in nineteenth-century literature : from Austen to Woolf
Palgrave, 2002
Available at 23 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 205-217) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book argues that brother-sister relationships, idealized by the Romantics, intensified in nineteenth-century English domestic culture, and is a neglected key to understanding Victorian gender relations. Attracted by the apparent purity of the sibling bond, novelists and poets also acknowledged its innate ambivalence and instability, through conflicting patterns of sublimated devotion, revenge fantasy, and corrosive obsession. The final chapter shows how the brother-sister bond was permanently changed by the experience of the First World War.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements Introduction The Brother-Sister Culture Brother/Sister Collaborative Groups 'One of the Highest Forms of Friendship': Brother-Sister Relationships in Women's Autobiography The Brother as Lover The Family Revenge Novel 'Changing Places': Siblings and Cross-Gendering 'Most Unwillingly Alive:' Brother and Sisters in the First World War Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index
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