This new study of Marie Louise de la Ramée (1839-1908), who wrote under the pseudonym Ouida, considers the best-selling Victorian author's vivid, evocativ...
International Edition
Ships within 15-17 Business Days
New
₹ 4193Used
-* This item is NOT Returnable *
ISBN-10:
1915115159
ISBN-13:
9781915115157
Publisher
Edward Everett Root
Dimensions
8.50 X 5.50 X 0.48 inches
Language
English
This new study of Marie Louise de la Ramée (1839-1908), who wrote under the pseudonym Ouida, considers the best-selling Victorian author's vivid, evocative work and especially the complex, even complicated ways in which she envisions and portrays gender.
Ouida's oeuvre, which includes non-fiction, short stories, and around forty novels over a forty-year writing period, and which was translated into more than ten foreign languages, is as diverse and unpredictable as the writer herself. She considered herself a francophile and cosmopolitan, moved from a London salon to a Florentine villa, and remained unmarried and self-supporting. Her work, which was admired by such contemporaries as John Ruskin, Oscar Wilde, and Marie Corelli, and which earned her a reputation as 'the English Zola', was noted for its vivid prose, high drama, and causal disregard for established moral conventions, particularly regarding gender. In turns associated with sensation fiction, social critique, and aestheticism, her novels' unifying trait is that they defied, and continue to defy, expectations.
Ouida wrote a critical desert adventure decades before the generations of Rider Haggard, General Gordon, or T.E. Lawrence. She satirised the marriage market and its social conventions, in turns bitterly and brilliantly funny, in her 1880 novel 'Moths', before the advent of New Woman fiction, a term she helped coin even as she remained critical of the figure. She had high moral standards for her characters, yet sent female spies and soldiers, and a multitude of happy adulteresses adventuring across European high society, without subjecting them to Victorian narrative justice that haunts the Fallen Woman. She willingly portrayed social taboos such as extramarital affairs, blackmail, or marital abuse, in her highly stylised and entertaining novels.
This study discusses Ouida's life and reception as a popular female author, skilful narrator, and fierce libertarian.
ISBN-10
:1915115159
ISBN-13
:9781915115157
Publisher
:Edward Everett Root
Publication date
: 30 Sep, 2024
Category
Sub-Category
: Feminist
Format
:PAPERBACK
Language
:English
Reading Level
: All
Dimension
: 8.50 X 5.50 X 0.48 inches
Weight
:272 g
Copyright © 2024. Boganto.com. All Rights Reserved