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The female Crusoe : hybridity, trade and the eighteenth-century individual / C.M. Owen.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Costerus ; new ser., v. 182.Publication details: Amsterdam ; New York, NY : Rodopi, 2010.Description: 1 online resource (299 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9789042029651
  • 904202965X
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Female Crusoe.DDC classification:
  • 820.9/005 22
LOC classification:
  • PN3432 .O94 2010eb
Online resources:
Contents:
Summary: What does the story of Robinson Crusoe have to do with understanding past and present women’s lives? The Female Crusoe: Hybridity, Trade and the Eighteenth-Century Individual investigates the possibility that Daniel Defoe’s famous work was informed by qualities attributed to trade, luxury and credit and described as feminine in the period. In this volume, Robinson Crusoe and the female castaway narratives published in its wake emerge as texts of social criticism that draw on neglected values of race and gender to challenge the dominant values of society. Such narratives worked to establish status and authority for marginalised characters and subjects who were as different, and as similar, as Defoe’s gentleman-tradesman and Wollstonecraft’s independent woman. The Female Crusoe goes on to address the twentieth-century engagement with the castaway tale, showing how three contemporary authors, in their complex and gendered negotiations of power and identity, echo, even while they challenge, the concerns of their eighteenth-century predecessors. This work will be of interest to students interested in literary engagements with individualism and women’s rights in the eighteenth and twentieth centuries.
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 261-282) and index.

Print version record.

What does the story of Robinson Crusoe have to do with understanding past and present women’s lives? The Female Crusoe: Hybridity, Trade and the Eighteenth-Century Individual investigates the possibility that Daniel Defoe’s famous work was informed by qualities attributed to trade, luxury and credit and described as feminine in the period. In this volume, Robinson Crusoe and the female castaway narratives published in its wake emerge as texts of social criticism that draw on neglected values of race and gender to challenge the dominant values of society. Such narratives worked to establish status and authority for marginalised characters and subjects who were as different, and as similar, as Defoe’s gentleman-tradesman and Wollstonecraft’s independent woman. The Female Crusoe goes on to address the twentieth-century engagement with the castaway tale, showing how three contemporary authors, in their complex and gendered negotiations of power and identity, echo, even while they challenge, the concerns of their eighteenth-century predecessors. This work will be of interest to students interested in literary engagements with individualism and women’s rights in the eighteenth and twentieth centuries.

Preliminary Material -- INTRODUCTION -- THE CRITICAL FORTUNES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE -- CRUSOE AND THE "FEMALE GODDESSES OF DISORDER" -- CREDIT, VIRGINITY AND THE CANNIBAL-CONSUMER -- THE SOCIAL CONTRACT AND THE WIDOW -- THE FEMALE CASTAWAY AS TRANSLATOR -- THE VIRGINAL INDIVIDUAL -- MOTHERS AND DAUGHTERS OF THE NEW WORLD -- FEMALE SEXUAL DESIRE AND INDEPENDENCE -- CRUSOE AND MODERN WOMAN -- BIBLIOGRAPHY -- INDEX.

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