WorldCat Linked Data Explorer

http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/1203208529

Mary Elizabeth Braddon and Yorkshire dialect, place and setting in Victorian sensation literature

Open All Close All

http://schema.org/description

  • ""This scholarly monograph offers new research on Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Braddon (1835-1916) who wrote over eighty novels and rivalled Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins in popularity in mid and late Victorian times. The study looks at the representations of Yorkshire across over thirty of her novels and analyses her uses of the Yorkshire dialect, her Yorkshire settings and specific towns and cities in the county (Braddon mentions more than 25 of these by name). It provides both an overview of her work and also contains some in-depth study of specific novels (including the best-seller Aurora Floyd). The study spans a significant time frame (over sixty years) to analyse how depictions of the county change. As well as looking at Braddon's work, it also considers the representations of Yorkshire by other prominent nineteenth-century writers including Elizabeth Gaskell, Edward Bulwer-Lytton and George Eliot amongst others. Place has an important role in "sensation" fiction, of which Braddon was a major exponent, much praised and pilloried by critics in her time. The domestic setting of many of her novels was one reason why the genre was so heavily criticized. There are no studies which look at Braddon's engagement with Yorkshire which is surprising as Braddon lived in the county for a period, and had her first novel produced by a Yorkshire publisher. This study aims to fill the gap in scholarship on this subject and elaborate on Yorkshire's unique place in 19c English popular fiction."--Publisher's website."

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Criticism, interpretation, etc"

http://schema.org/name

  • "Mary Elizabeth Braddon and Yorkshire dialect, place and setting in Victorian sensation literature"
  • "Mary Elizabeth Braddon and Yorkshire : dialect, place and setting in Victorian sensation literature"