1) Construction of Communicative Rationality A Study of Novels by Elizabeth Gaskell 交往理性的构建2) Construction in Communication 交往中的建构 例句>> 3) theory of constructive interaction 建构交往观 1. The theory of constructive interaction of teaching essence are:(1) Teaching may be described ...
作者: Gaskell, Elizabeth Cleghorn 出版年: 2010-1页数: 514定价: $ 44.92ISBN: 9781142884864豆瓣评分 目前无人评价 评价: 写笔记 写书评 加入购书单 分享到 推荐 内容简介 ··· This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing ...
In Elizabeth Gaskells Mary Barton (1848) and Margaret Harknesss George Eastmont, Wanderer (1905), both narrators describe a crowd of angry rioters as the "Frankenstein-monster". This article begins by examining Gaskells representations of her heroine and crowds in North and South (185455), ...
This dissertation argues that Elizabeth Gaskell's novels (Mary Barton, Ruth, North and South, Cranford, Sylvia's Lovers, and Wives and Daughters) challenge nineteenth-century notions of what constitutes reliable, credible, and admissible truth claims. Gaskell challenges the protocols for judging truth...
ByElizabeth Gaskell Gaskell’s novel reads like an enchanting fairy tale, drawing you in with every word. It’s a classic coming of age story with wicked stepmothers, scandals, and reputations at risk. Set in English society in the 1830s, the story follows a youthful Molly Gibson being brou...
We’re talking Dickens’ “big” novels, Elizabeth Gaskell’s North and south and Mary Barton, and so on. I loved them. “a deep dive into the era’s shallows” (Campbell) These novels have to be big, because a nation’s “condition” does not comprise one issue but a network of ...
William Langley
Gaskell's presentation of Unitarianism by name, as Unitarians felt there were people of worth in all religions, as is illustrated through character and plot in her novels. Each of the novels and short works of fiction illustrate all the precepts mentioned; Mary Barton, North and South, Ruth...
Massei-Chamayou, Marie-LaureCahiers Victoriens & Edouardiens
Gaskell feared the power of the uneducated masses principally because she believed that misguided use of that power would result in greater misery and distress among them. Certainly, she does not suggest that it is easy for the working classes to gain knowledge in the face of the inadequacy of...