ABSTRACT

Trev Lynn Broughton takes an in-depth look at the developments within Victorian auto/biography, and asks what we can learn about the conditions and limits of male literary authority. Providing a feminist analysis of the effects of this literary production on culture, Broughton looks at the increase in professions with a vested interest in the written Life; the speeding up of the Life-and-Letters industry during this period; the institutionalization of Life-writing; and the consequent spread of a network of mainly male practitioners and commentators.
This study focuses on two case studies from the period 1880-1903: the theories and achievements of Sir Leslie Stephen and the debate surrounding James Anthony Froude's account of the marriage of Thomas and Jane Welsh Carlyle.

part |2 pages

PART 1 Stephen’s Stephens

chapter |36 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|18 pages

ON THE WIRE

chapter 2|20 pages

MISSING HER

part |2 pages

PART 2 Froude’s Carlyles: anatomies of a controversy

chapter 3|30 pages

DUST-CLOUDS AND DISSONANCES

chapter 4|26 pages

Froude: the ‘painful appendix’

chapter 5|32 pages

‘REVELATIONS ON TICKLISH TOPICS’