Gender, Authorship and Male Domination : Mary Shelley’s Limited Freedom in "Frankenstein" and "The Last Man"


Autoria(s): Sinatra, Michael E.
Data(s)

14/04/2016

14/04/2016

2000

Resumo

Ever since Ellen Moer's "Literary Women" (1976), "Frankenstein" has been recognized as a novel in which issues about authorship are intimately bound up with those of gender. The work has frequently been related to the circumstance of Shelley's combining the biological role of mother with the social role of author. [...]

Identificador

Sinatra, Michael E., « Gender, Authorship and Male Domination : Mary Shelley’s Limited Freedom in "Frankenstein" and "The Last Man" », dans Michael E. Sinatra (dir.), Mary Shelley’s Fictions : From Frankenstein to Falkner, New York, Palgrave Macmillan, 2000, p. 95‑108.

978-0-333-77106-8

http://hdl.handle.net/1866/13564

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Palgrave Macmillan

Palavras-Chave #19th century #Authorship #Ellen Moer #English literature #Feminism #Frankenstein #Gender #Male domination #Mary Shelley #XIXe siècle #Moer, Ellen #Littérature anglaise #Féminisme #Genre #Domination masculine #Shelley, Mary
Tipo

Chapitre de livre / Book chapter