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Introduction; 1. Shakespeare and Victorian girls' education; 2. Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Shakespeare: translating the language of intimacy; 3. 'She had made him, as it were, the air she lived in': Shakespeare, Helen Faucit and Fanny Kemble; 4. George Eliot and Shakespeare: defamiliarising 'second nature'; 5. Socialism, nationalism and Stratford: Shakespeare and the New Woman at the fin de siècle; 6. Shakespeare and the actress in the 1890s.
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Add Shakespeare and Victorian Women, Much has been written on the cultural significance of Shakespeare, his influence on particular periods, and his appropriation and subsequent transformation. However, no book until now has specifically addressed the nature of the relationship between Shake, Shakespeare and Victorian Women to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Shakespeare and Victorian Women, Much has been written on the cultural significance of Shakespeare, his influence on particular periods, and his appropriation and subsequent transformation. However, no book until now has specifically addressed the nature of the relationship between Shake, Shakespeare and Victorian Women to your collection on WonderClub |