“We Always Say What We Like to One Another”: The Influence of Education on Women, Sympathy and Marriage in Early Nineteenth-Century British Literature

This thesis project investigates the relationship between education, sympathy, and marriage by analyzing the courtship process in three early nineteenth-century novels alongside three female educational texts. The role education plays in Austen’s Emma, Brontë’s Jane Eyre, and Gaskell’s North and Sou...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cameron, Leigh
Other Authors: Gillingham, Lauren
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/41029
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-25253
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-410292020-09-19T07:04:23Z “We Always Say What We Like to One Another”: The Influence of Education on Women, Sympathy and Marriage in Early Nineteenth-Century British Literature Cameron, Leigh Gillingham, Lauren marriage nineteenth-century literature sympathy education women Britain Victorian This thesis project investigates the relationship between education, sympathy, and marriage by analyzing the courtship process in three early nineteenth-century novels alongside three female educational texts. The role education plays in Austen’s Emma, Brontë’s Jane Eyre, and Gaskell’s North and South, particularly in terms of female characters’ marriage prospects, shows how writers at this time conceived of intellectual equality and opportunities for women, and how the terms in which they did so actively engaged with conduct book discourse. This project expands on Nancy Armstrong’s foundational study of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British fiction, Desire and Domestic Fiction, to show the continued interplay between novels and conduct literature through the mid-nineteenth century, a relationship she sees as defunct after the eighteenth century, as well as the vital role that the sympathetic exchange plays in completing a woman’s education. The thesis demonstrates how this fiction transformed possibilities for female characters’ social interactions, equality, and intellectual fulfilment by reimagining the terms of their domestic and romantic relationships in a dynamic engagement with the language and precepts of key conduct texts from the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. 2020-09-17T17:27:43Z 2020-09-17T17:27:43Z 2020-09-17 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/41029 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-25253 en application/pdf Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic marriage
nineteenth-century
literature
sympathy
education
women
Britain
Victorian
spellingShingle marriage
nineteenth-century
literature
sympathy
education
women
Britain
Victorian
Cameron, Leigh
“We Always Say What We Like to One Another”: The Influence of Education on Women, Sympathy and Marriage in Early Nineteenth-Century British Literature
description This thesis project investigates the relationship between education, sympathy, and marriage by analyzing the courtship process in three early nineteenth-century novels alongside three female educational texts. The role education plays in Austen’s Emma, Brontë’s Jane Eyre, and Gaskell’s North and South, particularly in terms of female characters’ marriage prospects, shows how writers at this time conceived of intellectual equality and opportunities for women, and how the terms in which they did so actively engaged with conduct book discourse. This project expands on Nancy Armstrong’s foundational study of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British fiction, Desire and Domestic Fiction, to show the continued interplay between novels and conduct literature through the mid-nineteenth century, a relationship she sees as defunct after the eighteenth century, as well as the vital role that the sympathetic exchange plays in completing a woman’s education. The thesis demonstrates how this fiction transformed possibilities for female characters’ social interactions, equality, and intellectual fulfilment by reimagining the terms of their domestic and romantic relationships in a dynamic engagement with the language and precepts of key conduct texts from the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
author2 Gillingham, Lauren
author_facet Gillingham, Lauren
Cameron, Leigh
author Cameron, Leigh
author_sort Cameron, Leigh
title “We Always Say What We Like to One Another”: The Influence of Education on Women, Sympathy and Marriage in Early Nineteenth-Century British Literature
title_short “We Always Say What We Like to One Another”: The Influence of Education on Women, Sympathy and Marriage in Early Nineteenth-Century British Literature
title_full “We Always Say What We Like to One Another”: The Influence of Education on Women, Sympathy and Marriage in Early Nineteenth-Century British Literature
title_fullStr “We Always Say What We Like to One Another”: The Influence of Education on Women, Sympathy and Marriage in Early Nineteenth-Century British Literature
title_full_unstemmed “We Always Say What We Like to One Another”: The Influence of Education on Women, Sympathy and Marriage in Early Nineteenth-Century British Literature
title_sort “we always say what we like to one another”: the influence of education on women, sympathy and marriage in early nineteenth-century british literature
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/41029
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-25253
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