2022
DOI: 10.4000/ejas.18592
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Louisa May Alcott’s Changing Views on Women, Work, and Marriage in Work

Abstract: Louisa May Alcott's intriguing and productive mix of fiction and auto-fiction suffuses the experience of the female protagonist of her Transcendentalist Bildungsroman Work (1873). The text, therefore, engages intersecting but distinct discourses of femininity, domesticity, and individual emancipation. The novel proposes a new direction by placing women squarely in the public sphere of labor and social relations, even though that move is qualified by normative and sentimentalist constraints for middle-class cha… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...

Citation Types

0
0
0

Year Published

2023
2023
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
2
1

Relationship

0
3

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 3 publications
references
References 7 publications
0
0
0
Order By: Relevance