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Vernon Lee : aesthetics, history, and the Victorian female intellectual / Christa Zorn.
Van Pelt Library PR5115.P2 Z98 2003
Available
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Zorn, Christa, 1954-
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Lee, Vernon, 1856-1935--Criticism and interpretation.
- Lee, Vernon.
- Lee, Vernon, 1856-1935.
- Feminism and literature--Great Britain--History--19th century.
- Feminism and literature.
- Women intellectuals.
- Women.
- Intellectual life.
- Criticism and interpretation.
- Great Britain.
- History.
- Literature and history--Great Britain--History--19th century.
- Literature and history.
- Women and literature--Great Britain--History--19th century.
- Women and literature.
- Women--Great Britain--Intellectual life.
- Modernism (Literature)--Great Britain.
- Modernism (Literature).
- Women intellectuals--Great Britain.
- Aestheticism (Literature).
- Physical Description:
- xxxi, 213 pages ; 24 cm
- Place of Publication:
- Athens : Ohio University Press, [2003]
- Summary:
- The subject of renewed interest among literary and cultural scholars, Vernon Lee wrote more than forty books, in a broad range of genres, including fiction, history, aesthetics, and travel literature. Early on, Lee established her reputation as a public critic whose unconventional viewpoints stood out among those of her contemporaries. To feminist and cultural critics, she is a fascinating model of the independent female intellectual who, as Desmond MacCarthy once put it, provides "a rare combination of intellectual curiosity and imaginative sensibility." A startlingly original critical study, Vernon Lee adds new dimensions to the legacy of this woman of letters whose career spans the transition from the late Victorian to the modernist period. Christa Zorn draws on archival materials to discuss Lee's work in terms of British aestheticism and in the context of the Western European history of ideas. Christa Zorn contends that Lee's fiction and nonfiction represent a literary position that bridges and surpasses both the Victorian sage and the modernist aesthetic critic. Through Professor Zorn's approach, which combines theoretical framings of texts in terms of recent feminist and cultural criticism with passages of close reading, Vernon Lee emerges as an influential figure in late-nineteenth-century British and continental European thinking on history, art, culture, and gender.
- Contents:
- 1 Life and Letters: Vernon Lee's Role in Literary History 1
- 2 History and the Female Voice 25
- 3 Between the Lines of Gender and Genre 60
- 4 Literary Form and Alternative Subjectivity 76
- 5 Miss Brown
- An Aesthetic Bildungsroman? 111
- 6 Vernon Lee and the Fantastic 140.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 195-206) and index.
- ISBN:
- 0821414976
- OCLC:
- 51519715
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