Skip to main content Site map

Dissenting Women in Dickens' Novels: The Subversion of Domestic Ideology


Dissenting Women in Dickens' Novels: The Subversion of Domestic Ideology

Hardback by Ayres, Brenda

Dissenting Women in Dickens' Novels: The Subversion of Domestic Ideology

£70.00

ISBN:
9780313307638
Publication Date:
30 Jul 1998
Language:
English
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Imprint:
Praeger Publishers Inc
Pages:
200 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 28 May - 2 Jun 2024
Dissenting Women in Dickens' Novels: The Subversion of Domestic Ideology

Description

Given their pedagogical nature, many Victorian novels are highly politicized; their narratives are filtered through the value schemes, social views, and conscious purposes of their authors. Victorian women were largely expected to dedicate themselves to the social and moral betterment of their families. Women were expected to be soft, meek, quiet, modest, submissive, gentle, patient, and spiritual; men were supposed to be aggressive, assertive, resilient, disciplined, and competitive. These expectations were repeatedly endorsed through the conduct books of the period, which encouraged people to adhere to proper behavior. The Victorian era also viewed fiction as a didactic tool and as a means to propagate morality. Thus novels of the period typically present women as subordinate to men and as angels of the home. Women who conform to the social norms are usually rewarded in these fictitious worlds, whereas women who violate society's standards are often penalized. Certainly the novels of Charles Dickens fall into the larger didactic trend of Victorian fiction, and like other works of the period, his novels overtly support the conventional values of Victorian society. Dickens typically uses descriptive detail to register approval or disapproval of certain women, and these women are rewarded or chastized through his plots. But on a less obvious level, Dickens also challenges the prevailing Victorian attitude toward women. A close look at his works shows that patriarchs do not automatically deserve the respect they command from their privileged social positions. Women-however virtuous-are unable to produce moral or social change, and many women succeed outside the constraints of domesticity. This book provides a penetrating analysis of how Dickens' novels ultimately fail to promote the conventional Victorian behavioral ideal for women and discusses how his works subvert the domestic ideology of the nineteenth century.

Contents

Introduction The Women of David Copperfield Barnaby Rudge's Mrs. Varden The Spinster of Barnaby Rudge The Women Inside the Fold The Women Outside the Fold The Women Who Don't Fit into the Fold The True Heroine in Oliver Twist The Passionate and the Contained Women of Oliver Twist The "Pattern" of Bleak House Bibliographical Essay Index

Back

University of Salford logo