Redemption and Madness: Three Nineteenth-century Feminist Views on Motherhood and Childbearing |
Contents
Authors Preface | 9 |
Mary Shelley and Frankenstein | 25 |
Conclusion | 53 |
Copyright | |
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abuse Alice Meynell Andrea Breemer Frantz anxiety artistic Arts degree Buena Vista College Cathy Earnshaw Linton Cathy's child Childbearing by Andrea childbirth community of Storm concept conflict creation deemed motherhood destruction domesticity Elizabeth Gaskell Emily Brontė essay experience fear feelings about childbearing female characters feminist literature Frankenstein and Cathy Frantz has taught Frantz was raised Gaskell portrays George Eliot German from Simpson Hannah Heathcliff Hindley insights Iowa State University Jane Austen leave one devoid literary married Mary Shelley Mary Wollstonecraft mass communication classes Maternal Death Scene moral Motherhood and Childbearing Motherhood Andrea Breemer Nineteenth-Century Feminist Views nineteenth-century mother nineteenth-century women northwest Iowa community novel Oxford Univ passion portrait of motherhood Poston Professor Frantz raised in Grinnell reality Redemption and Madness rhetoric at Iowa Ruth's pregnancy secondary characters Shelley viewed Shelley's eyes Simpson College Storm Lake Three Nineteenth-Century Feminist University Press Victorian Literature Views on Motherhood woman York young Catherine