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Book

The Ends of History

Book

The Ends of History

DOI link for The Ends of History

The Ends of History book

Victorians and "the Woman Question"

The Ends of History

DOI link for The Ends of History

The Ends of History book

Victorians and "the Woman Question"
ByChristina Crosby
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 1991
eBook Published 13 September 2012
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203104125
Pages 200
eBook ISBN 9780203104125
Subjects Humanities, Social Sciences
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Crosby, C. (1991). The Ends of History: Victorians and "the Woman Question" (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203104125

ABSTRACT

Why were the Victorians so passionate about "History"?

How did this passion relate to another Victorian obsession – the "woman question"? In a brilliant and provocative study, Christina Crosby investigates the links between the Victorians’ fascination with "history" and with the nature of "women."

Discussing both key novels and non-literary texts – Daniel Deronda and Hegel’s Philosophy of History; Henry Esmond and Macaulay’s History of England; Little Dorrit, Wilkie Collins’ The Frozen Deep, and Mayhew’s survey of "labour and the poor"; Villette, Patrick Fairburn’s The Typology of Scripture and Ruskin’s Modern Painters – she argues that the construction of middle-class Victorian "man" as the universal subject of history entailed the identification of "women" as those who are before, beyond, above, or below history. Crosby’s analysis raises a crucial question for today’s feminists – how can one read historically without replicating the problem of nineteenth century "history"?

The book was first published in 1991.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|32 pages

George Eliot's apocalypse of history

chapter 2|25 pages

Henry Esmond and the subject of history

chapter 3|41 pages

History and the melodramatic fix

chapter 4|34 pages

Villette and the end of history

chapter 5|15 pages

Conclusion: the high cost of history

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