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.
The first full-length study of Shakespeare's influence on Victorian women writers, actresses and readers.
Gail Marshall is Reader in Nineteenth-Century Literature at the Department of English, Oxford Brookes University.
Review of the hardback: '… Marshall provides ample reward to the
reader as she uncovers fascinating material about Victorian culture
and provides intelligent, useful analysis of it. The book is a
fitting tribute to those women who made Shakespeare their own.'
Literature and History
Review of the hardback: 'Gail Marshall's readable, intense and at
times intensive study of the role of Shakespeare in the lives of
Victorian women ranges over a wide spectrum of artistic forms from
poetry to painting, from the full-blown novel to teenage essay
writing … the 'translation' offered in these six chapters gives
future interpreters the grounds from which to explore further
painted representations, more performances and other female writers
such as Anna Jameson and the reviewers and educators who have a
shadowy presence in this book along with the 'elusive' Shakespeare
himself.' English Studies
Review of the hardback: 'This book represents a fresh study of the
impact Shakespeare had on the lives and work of Victorian women.'
Archiv für das Studium der neueren Sprachen und Literaturen
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