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Victorian literature and the anorexic body
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ISBN: 1107134285 0511484925 0511147961 0511325762 1280159731 0511120788 0521025516 0511045840 9780521816021 0521816025 9780521025515 9780511484926 0511020600 9780511020605 9780511120787 9780511045844 9780511147968 9781107134287 9780511325762 9781280159732 Year: 2002 Publisher: Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press,

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Abstract

Anna Krugovoy Silver examines the ways nineteenth-century British writers used physical states of the female body - hunger, appetite, fat and slenderness - in the creation of female characters. Silver argues that anorexia nervosa, first diagnosed in 1873, serves as a paradigm for the cultural ideal of middle-class womanhood in Victorian Britain. In addition, Silver relates these literary expressions to the representation of women's bodies in the conduct books, beauty manuals and other non-fiction prose of the period, contending that women 'performed' their gender and class alliances through the slender body. Silver discusses a wide range of writers including Charlotte Brontë, Christina Rossetti, Charles Dickens, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Bram Stoker and Lewis Carroll to show that mainstream models of middle-class Victorian womanhood share important qualities with the beliefs or behaviours of the anorexic girl or woman.

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