The Athelings or the Three Gifts Vol. 3


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"The Athelings, Volume 3" is a thrilling book that Amelia Edith Huddleston Barr wrote. The book is ready the lives of the Atheling brothers, a set of six siblings who lost their mother and father when they were young. The story takes place in England in the center of the 1800s and tells the ride of each sibling, with Lionel Atheling, the oldest brother, getting the maximum attention. Lionel is a skilled artist who has a difficult time making a residing from what he loves. No count number how an awful lot he loves it; he does not want to make it his career. Instead, he'd rather work as a clerk in a bank. While Lionel is becoming increasingly sadder along with his job, he reveals consolation in his artwork and starts offevolved to work on it greater significantly. The book looks at his relationships together with his siblings, which includes his sister Elizabeth, who has decided to marry for cash and status, and with the individuals who help him with his creative projects. The book paints a vivid photograph of the social norms and financial issues of the time, as well as the many ways that they affected the Atheling brothers. The stories of each Atheling sibling display the many social and monetary problems that younger people in England inside the 1800s had to address, including setting professional dreams, finding suitable companions, and making critical contributions to society even as the financial system was awful.




The Athelings


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Reproduction of the original: The Athelings by Margaret Oliphant




Bibliotheca Lindesiana ...


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The Selected Works of Margaret Oliphant, Part II Volume 6


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Margaret Oliphant (1828-97) had a prolific literary career that spanned almost fifty years. She wrote some 98 novels, fifty or more short stories, twenty-five works of non-fiction, including biographies and historic guides to European cities, and more than three hundred periodical articles. This is the most ambitious critical edition of her work.




Victorian Metafiction


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Critics agree in the abstract that "metafiction" refers to any novel that draws attention to its own fictional construction, but metafiction has been largely associated with the postmodern era. In this innovative new book Tabitha Sparks identifies a sustained pattern of metafiction in the Victorian novel that illuminates the art and intentions of its female practitioners. From the mid-nineteenth century through the fin de siècle, novels by Victorian women such as Charlotte Brontë, Rhoda Broughton, Charlotte Riddell, Eliza Lynn Linton, and several New Women authors share a common but underexamined trope: the fictional characterization of the woman novelist or autobiographer. Victorian Metafiction reveals how these novels systemically dispute the assumptions that women wrote primarily about their emotions or were restricted to trivial, sentimental plots. Countering an established tradition that has read novels by women writers as heavily autobiographical and confessional, Sparks identifies the literary technique of metafiction in numerous novels by women writers and argues that women used metafictional self-consciousness to draw the reader’s attention to the book and not the novelist. By dislodging the narrative from these cultural prescriptions, Victorian Metafiction effectively argues how these women novelists presented the business and art of writing as the subject of the novel and wrote metafiction in order to establish their artistic integrity and professional authority.




The Publisher


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British Books


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