Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- List of Illustrations
- Series Editor’s Preface
- Acknowledgements
-
Chapter 1 Housing Crisis: Home and Identity in Nineteenth-Century Literary London -
Chapter 2 ‘Out of its torpid misery’: Plotting Passivity in Margaret Harkness’s A City Girl -
Chapter 3 ‘More making the best of it’: Living with Liberalism in Mary Ward’s Marcella -
Chapter 4 Labour Leaders and Socialist Saviours: Individualism and Collectivism in Margaret Harkness’s George Eastmont, Wanderer -
Chapter 5 Irritating Rules and Oppressive Officials: Convention and Innovation in Evelyn Sharp’s The Making of a Prig -
Chapter 6 The Kailyard Comes to London: The Progressive Potential of Romantic Convention in Annie S. Swan’s A Victory Won -
Chapter 7 Fugitive Living: Social Mobility and Domestic Space in Julia Frankau’s The Heart of a Child -
Chapter 8 ‘Vital friendship’: Sexual and Economic Ambivalence in Rhoda Broughton’s Dear Faustina -
Chapter 9 ‘Twenty girls in my attic’: Spatial and Spiritual Conversion in L. T. Meade’s A Princess of the Gutter -
Chapter 10 ‘To make a garden of the town’: The Nineteenth-Century Legacy of the Hampstead Garden Suburb - Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index
(p.196) Bibliography
(p.196) Bibliography
- Source:
- Home and Identity in Nineteenth-Century Literary London
- Author(s):
Lisa C. Robertson
- Publisher:
- Edinburgh University Press
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- Title Pages
- List of Illustrations
- Series Editor’s Preface
- Acknowledgements
-
Chapter 1 Housing Crisis: Home and Identity in Nineteenth-Century Literary London -
Chapter 2 ‘Out of its torpid misery’: Plotting Passivity in Margaret Harkness’s A City Girl -
Chapter 3 ‘More making the best of it’: Living with Liberalism in Mary Ward’s Marcella -
Chapter 4 Labour Leaders and Socialist Saviours: Individualism and Collectivism in Margaret Harkness’s George Eastmont, Wanderer -
Chapter 5 Irritating Rules and Oppressive Officials: Convention and Innovation in Evelyn Sharp’s The Making of a Prig -
Chapter 6 The Kailyard Comes to London: The Progressive Potential of Romantic Convention in Annie S. Swan’s A Victory Won -
Chapter 7 Fugitive Living: Social Mobility and Domestic Space in Julia Frankau’s The Heart of a Child -
Chapter 8 ‘Vital friendship’: Sexual and Economic Ambivalence in Rhoda Broughton’s Dear Faustina -
Chapter 9 ‘Twenty girls in my attic’: Spatial and Spiritual Conversion in L. T. Meade’s A Princess of the Gutter -
Chapter 10 ‘To make a garden of the town’: The Nineteenth-Century Legacy of the Hampstead Garden Suburb - Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index