Cranford

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Broadview Press, Aug 19, 2010 - Fiction - 300 pages

Elizabeth Gaskell’s episodic second novel, sometimes dismissed as nostalgically “charming,” is now considered by many critics to be her most sophisticated work. The country town of Cranford is home to a group of women, affectionately called “Amazons” by the narrator, whose seemingly uneventful lives are full of conflicts, failures, and unexpected connections. A rich commentary on Victorian culture by one of its most astute observers, Cranford owes its enduring popularity to the complex pleasures it offers the reader.

This Broadview Edition provides an assortment of historical materials to put the novel in context, including Gaskell’s letters from the period of the novel’s writing, excerpts from texts read by the characters, illustrations from the novel and from contemporary periodicals, and other Victorian writings on industrialization, etiquette, and domestic life.

 

Contents

Acknowledgements
7
Introduction
9
A Brief Chronology
33
A Note on the Text
37
Cranford
39
Pre and PostCranfordTexts
221
Cranford Correspondence
241
Contemporary Reviewsand Tributes
251
Industrialization andMoral Responsibility
261
Class Conduct andEtiquette
275
Economies Political andDomestic
279
Select Bibliography
297
Copyright

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About the author (2010)

Elizabeth Langland is Professor of English and Dean of the New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences at Arizona State University. She has published widely on Victorian literature.

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