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El. knyga: Love's Madness: Medicine, the Novel and Female Insanity, 1800-1865 New edition [Oxford Scholarship Online E-books]

(Lecturer in English, University of Bristol)
  • Formatas: 276 pages, 3 black and white halftones
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Oct-1998
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780198184911
  • Oxford Scholarship Online E-books
  • Kaina nežinoma
  • Formatas: 276 pages, 3 black and white halftones
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Oct-1998
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780198184911
Love's Madness makes an important new contribution to the interdisciplinary study of insanity. Focusing on the figure of the love-mad woman, Helen Small presents a significant reassessment of the ways in which British medical writers and novelists of the nineteenth century thought about madness, about femininity, and about narrative convention. At the centre of the book are studies of novels by Jane Austen, Sir Walter Scott, Charlotte Brontė, Wilkie Collins, and Charles Dickens, but Small also brings out the historical and literary interest of hitherto neglected writings by Charles Maturin, Lady Caroline Lamb, Edward Bulwer-Lytton, and others.

Stories about women who go mad when they lose their lovers were extraordinarily popular during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, attracting novelists, poets, dramatists, musicians, painters, and sculptors. The representative figure of madness ceased to be the madman in chains and became instead the woman whose insanity was an extension of her female condition. Love's Madness traces the fortunes of love-mad women in fiction and in medicine between about 1800 and 1865. In literary terms, these dates demarcate the period between the decline of sentimentalism and the emergence of sensation fiction. In medical terms, they mark out a key stage in the history of insanity, beginning with major reform initiatives and ending with the establishment in 1865 of the Medico-Psychological Association.

This original and highly readable study challenges previous assumptions about the relationship between medicine and the novel. A major addition to nineteenth-century studies, it will be of interest to students and scholars of literature, feminism, social history, and the history of medicine.
List of Illustrations
xiii
Love's Madness
1(32)
Love-Mad Women and the Rhetoric of Gentlemanly Medicine
33(39)
Hyperbole and the Love-Mad Woman: George III, `Rosa Matilda', and Jane Austen in 1811
72(33)
Love-Mad Women and Political Insurrection in Regency Fiction
105(34)
The Hyena's Laughter: Lucretia and Jane Eyre
139(40)
The Woman in White, Great Expectations, and the Limits of Medicine
179(42)
Select Bibliography 221(28)
Index 249