Introduction: Reading Silence in the Long Nineteenth-Century Women’s Life Writing Archive
This introduction reflects on the nineteenth-century women’s life writing archive as a concept as well as a space. Is the long nineteenth-century women’s life writing archive a unique entity that stands apart from the wider archive? If so, how do we interpret its borders? How can we read silences, o...
Main Author: | Alexis Wolf |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Open Library of Humanities
2018-12-01
|
Series: | 19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://www.19.bbk.ac.uk/articles/841 |
Similar Items
-
“We Always Say What We Like to One Another”: The Influence of Education on Women, Sympathy and Marriage in Early Nineteenth-Century British Literature
by: Cameron, Leigh
Published: (2020) -
Producing Sarhili: the colonial archive and the biographical limits of writing a history of a nineteenth century Xhosa king
by: Slade, Virgil Charles
Published: (2014) -
Culture and Money in the Nineteenth Century : Abstracting Economics
Published: (2016) -
Revisiting the murderess representations of Victorian women's violence in mid-nineteenth- and late-twentieth-century fiction
by: Ritchie, Jessica Frances
Published: (2008) -
Introduction: Dickens, Science and the Victorian Literary Imagination
by: Ben Winyard, et al.
Published: (2010-04-01)