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2016 | 26 | 1 | 72-86

Article title

Female Researchers in Neo-Victorian Fiction

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Neo-Victorian novelists sometimes use postgraduate students – trainee academics – who research nineteenth-century writers as protagonists. This article discusses four neo-Victorian novels, Lloyd Jones’s Mister Pip (2006), Justine Picardie’s Daphne (2008), A.N. Wilson’s A Jealous Ghost (2005) and Scarlett Thomas’s The End of Mr Y (2006), in which female postgraduate students take the centre stage. In Victorian literature, which mirrors the gender bias in the academic world and in society at large at that time, most scholars are male. The contemporary writers’ choice of female trainee academics is worth investigating as it speaks to the visibly changed gender make-up of contemporary academia. However, this utopian situation is complicated by the fact that the writers have chosen to frustrate the characters’ entry into the world of scholarship by having them leave the university environment altogether before the end of the novel. The fact that these females all choose to depart the university forms a contrast with notions of the university found in Victorian novels, in which leaving or not attending university might have detrimental effects on the characters.

Publisher

Year

Volume

26

Issue

1

Pages

72-86

Physical description

Dates

published
2016-06-01
online
2016-06-11

Contributors

  • Hong Kong Baptist University

References

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Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_1515_abcsj-2016-0005
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