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Schools of Sympathy

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Schools of Sympathy is a feminist exploration of gender and identification in Samuel Richardson's Clarissa, Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter, Henry James's Portrait of a Lady, and Thomas Ha...
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  • 12 September 1997
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Schools of Sympathy is a feminist exploration of gender and identification in Samuel Richardson's Clarissa, Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter, Henry James's Portrait of a Lady, and Thomas Hardy's Tess of the D'Urbervilles. In each of these novels the heroine is portrayed as a victim. Nancy Roberts examines how the reader's sympathy for the heroines is constructed, the motivations and desires involved in an identification with victimization, and the gender and power roles that such an identification calls into play.

Roberts argues that Clarissa's, Hester's, Isabel's, and Tess's "heroism" or "greatness" is measured not by her actions but by the extent to which others are moved by her. Therefore, the character cannot be studied without studying the response she generates, which, in these novels, is sympathy. Roberts asserts that each of the novels can be understood as a school of sympathy, through which we learn to behave and feel as gendered subjects, and that our response to the heroine is as carefully crafted as the character herself.

Schools of Sympathy addresses issues of masochism, female victimization, the power of passive seduction, and the possibilities of heroism. As a counterpoint to these eighteenth- and nineteenth-century male perspectives, Roberts examines works by Margaret Atwood and Angela Carter that explicitly address these issues.

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Price: $37.95
Pages: 192
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press
Publication Date: 12 September 1997
ISBN: 9780773516854
Format: Paperback
BISACs: LITERARY CRITICISM / Women Authors, LITERARY CRITICISM / Feminist
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"Schools of Sympathy is an excellent work. Roberts convincingly argues that a comparison of constructions of female subjectivity in male- and female-authored novels provides for a critique of historical perceptions of female agency and of conditioned aesthetic responses to feminine representation. The author's graceful prose and discerning perceptions engage her readers, and her work provides a provocative and informative analysis of the texts under study." Priscilla Walton, Department of English, Carleton University