Items

Details

Part I: Performance, fashion, and the politics of the popular. 1. Historicizing the popular and the feminine: The rape of the lock and Pride and prejudice and zombies / Tiffany Potter
'The assemblage of every female folly': Lavinia Fenton, Kitty Clive and the genesis of ballad opera / Berta Joncus
Politics and gender in a tale of two plays / Paula Backscheider
Celebrity status: the eighteenth-century actress as fashion icon / Jessica Munns
Fanning the flames: women, fashion and politics / Elaine Chalus
Part II: Women, reading, and writing. The culinary art of eighteenth-century women cookbook authors / Robert James Merrett
Women and letters / Isobel Grundy
Writing bodies in popular culture: Eliza Haywood and Love in excess / Holly Luhning
Women reading and writing for The rambler / Peter Sabor
'The most dangerous talent': riddles as feminine pastime / Mary Chadwick
Comic prints, the picturesque and fashion: seeing and being seen in Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey / Timothy Erwin
Part III: Eighteenth-century women in modern popular culture. Mother and daughter in Beryl Bainbridge's According to queeney / Martha F. Bowden
The agency of things in Emma Donoghue's Slammerkin / Elizabeth Kowaleski Wallace
'Would you have us laughed out of Bath?': shopping around for fashion and fashionable fiction in Jane Austen adaptations / Tamara S. Wagner
Visualizing empire in domestic settings: designing Persuasion for the screen / Andrew MacDonald and Gina MacDonald
From Pride and prejudice to Lost in Austen and back again: reading television reading novels / Claire Grogan.

Browse Subjects

Show more subjects...

Statistics

from
to
Export