In what way does Gaskell argue the necessity of education for girls and women in Wives and Daughters?
Date Submitted: 11/18/2004 11:03:29
Wives and Daughters proved to be something of a departure for Gaskell. In many of her previous novels she had undertaken an examination of a social question such as the class disputes in Mary Barton or North and South, or the plight of a fallen woman and her illegitimate child in Ruth. From her earliest works her attention was always focused on the social and emotional problems of her women characters but in Wives and
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Spencer, Jane. Women Writers: Elizabeth Gaskell. Macmillan. London. 1993.
Wardle, David. English Popular Education 1780-1970. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. 1970.
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