Fire and fiction : : Augusta Jane Evans in context / / Anna Sophia Roelina Riepma.

Augusta Jane Evans, a nineteenth-century writer from the American South, produced bestsellers in the genre of the domestic novel, popular between the 1820s and 1880s. Evans was particularly good in creating strong and independent heroines. She is best known for her blockbuster St. Elmo (1866), featu...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Costerus New Series ; 125
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Place / Publishing House:Amsterdam ;, Atlanta, Georgia : : Rodopi,, [2000]
©2000
Year of Publication:2000
Language:English
Series:Costerus New Series ; 125.
Physical Description:1 online resource.
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Table of Contents:
  • Intro
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Dedication
  • Table of Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Abbreviations used in the parenthetical references
  • Introduction: Reconstructing Augusta Evans's Cultural Environment
  • 1 Religious Culture: Inez and Beulah
  • Inez
  • Beulah and Female Independence
  • Beulah's Intellectual and Spiritual Crisis
  • 2 Confederate Womanhood: Macaria
  • Republican Motherhood and Female Education in the North
  • Plantation Culture
  • Domesticity and Social Reform
  • The Confederate War
  • 3 The Ideology of Domesticity Triumphant: St Elmo
  • Female Education in the South
  • The Role of the Ministers
  • Southern Manhood
  • Women's Political Equality
  • The Woman Writer
  • Southern Womanhood
  • 4 The Final Stage
  • Vashti
  • Infelice
  • At the Mercy of Tiberius
  • A Speckled Bird
  • Devota
  • 5 From the Home to the Stage
  • Sister Carrie
  • The House of Mirth
  • The Song of the Lark
  • Conclusion
  • Works Cited.