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  2. Roman fever: domesticity and nationalism in nineteenth-century American women's writing

Roman fever: domesticity and nationalism in nineteenth-century American women's writing

Annamaria Formichella Elsden c2004 © The Ohio State University Press
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ISBN(s)
  • 9780814209462 (hardcover)
  • 9780814251171 (paper)
Subject
  • Women's Studies
Citable Link
  • Table of Contents

  • Reviews

  • Stats

  • Frontmatter
  • Acknowledgments (page vii)
  • INTRODUCTION "A Tale of Import So Divine": New Women in the Old World (page ix)
  • CHAPTER 1 "I Forgot Myself": Nation and Identity in Catharine Maria Sedgwick's Travel Writing (page 1)
  • CHAPTER 2 Margaret Fuller's Tribune Dispatches and the Nineteenth-Century Body Politic (page 25)
  • CHAPTER 3 Domesticity and Nationalism in Harriet Beecher Stowe's Agnes of Sorrento (page 46)
  • CHAPTER 4 "How Can I Write Down the Flowers?": Representation and Copying in Sophia Peabody Hawthorne's Notes in England and Italy (page 71)
  • CHAPTER 5 "Closing Her Lips with Gentle Hand": Domesticated Artists in Constance Fenimore Woolson's "'Miss Grief'" and "The Street of the Hyacinth" (page 95)
  • CHAPTER 6 Roman Fever Revisited (page 119)
  • Notes (page 133)
  • Bibliography (page 145)
  • Index (page 151)
Reviews
Journal AbbreviationLabelURL
LEG 25.1 (2008): 170-171 http://www.jstor.org/stable/25679642
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