New men in Trollope's novels : rewriting the Victorian male

Bibliographic Information

New men in Trollope's novels : rewriting the Victorian male

Margaret Markwick

(Nineteenth century series)

Ashgate, c2007

Available at  / 5 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

"New Men in Trollope's Novels" challenges the popular construction of Victorian men as patriarchal despots and suggests that hands-on fatherhood may have been a nineteenth-century norm. Beginning with an evaluation of the evidence for cultural determinations of masculinity during Trollope's times, Markwick sets the stage with a discussion of the religious, philosophical, and educational influences that informed the evolution of Trollope's personal views of masculinity as he grew from boyhood into later manhood.Her treatment of his novels, drawing on a wide selection from across the oevre, shows that sensitive examination of Trollope's texts discovers him advancing a startlingly modern model of manhood under a veneer of conformity. Trollope's independent views on child-rearing, education, courtship, marriage, parenthood, and gay men are also discussed within the context of Victorian culture in this witty, original, and immensely knowledgeable study of Victorian masculinity.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: Trollope past and present
  • The making of Victorian manliness
  • Men in fiction
  • Telling masculinities
  • The preux chevalier: 'sans peur et sans reproche'
  • From birth to man's estate
  • Sex and the single man
  • Husbands, fathers, sons
  • Smoking rooms: bawdy jokes
  • Select bibliography
  • Index.

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