Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/000620681/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 29 of
29
with 100 items per page.
- catalog contributor b779040.
- catalog created "c1987.".
- catalog date "1987".
- catalog date "c1987.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1987.".
- catalog description "1. Introduction: a book by its cover "The Algonquin Cinderella" -- 2. The Eye of the beholder: reader as spectator -- 3. The Bodies and spirits of the age: competing categories of value in nineteenth-century England. Art and nature. Nature and nurture. Delicacy and health: Pygmalion's Galatea and Little Nell -- 4. Shaping the body to fit the eye: Austen's Persuasion as a romantic cinderella -- 4. Charm: the nature of art. Beginning with the beginning of Middlemarch. Mothers and harlots, bedrooms and battlefields: Hebrew scriptures and Midrash. Spenser's Una and Duessa; Milton's Dalila. The bequest of the jewel box: Scott's Ivanhoe. Thackeray's Rebeccas. Concluding Middlemarch. Jewel caskets after Middlemarch. The future of an allusion -- 6. Grace: the birth of breeding. Male beauty contests: Daphnis and Chloe and Wuthering Heights. The wild boy of Aveyron: Itard's diary and Shuttuck's The forbidden experiment. Coats and tales: Joseph in Hebrew scriptures, Midrash and Koran. Joseph and Daphis: Fielding's Joseph Andrews. Beauty in the beast: Wuthering Heights. Wild in the third story: Jane Eyre. Foundling of low birth: Great Expectations-- 7. Delicacy: the flower of health. Delicate beauty goes out: George Eliot's Adam Bede. Lilies exposed: Dinah and Susanna in Hebrew scriptures, Apocrypha, and Midrash. Crimson rose: Hetty Sorrel. Scarlet rose: Hester Prynne. Lily is rose: Dinah and Hetty. The certain beauty of health: Gissing's The odd women. The delicacy of health: Hardy's Jude the obscure -- 8. Conclusions: beauty beyond description. Beast in the beauty: The picture of Dorian Gray. Arrowy nose in short tense flight, eyes like drenched violets: Woolf's Orlando.".
- catalog description "Bibliography: p. [233]-240.".
- catalog extent "viii, 243 p. :".
- catalog hasFormat "Character of beauty in the Victorian novel.".
- catalog identifier "0835717550".
- catalog isFormatOf "Character of beauty in the Victorian novel.".
- catalog isPartOf "Nineteenth-century studies".
- catalog issued "1987".
- catalog issued "c1987.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Ann Arbor, Mich. : UMI Research Press,".
- catalog relation "Character of beauty in the Victorian novel.".
- catalog subject "823/.8/09353 19".
- catalog subject "Beauty, Personal, in literature.".
- catalog subject "Characters and characteristics in literature.".
- catalog subject "English fiction 19th century History and criticism.".
- catalog subject "Heroes in literature.".
- catalog subject "Heroines in literature.".
- catalog subject "PR878.B4 L4 1987".
- catalog subject "Values in literature.".
- catalog tableOfContents "1. Introduction: a book by its cover "The Algonquin Cinderella" -- 2. The Eye of the beholder: reader as spectator -- 3. The Bodies and spirits of the age: competing categories of value in nineteenth-century England. Art and nature. Nature and nurture. Delicacy and health: Pygmalion's Galatea and Little Nell -- 4. Shaping the body to fit the eye: Austen's Persuasion as a romantic cinderella -- 4. Charm: the nature of art. Beginning with the beginning of Middlemarch. Mothers and harlots, bedrooms and battlefields: Hebrew scriptures and Midrash. Spenser's Una and Duessa; Milton's Dalila. The bequest of the jewel box: Scott's Ivanhoe. Thackeray's Rebeccas. Concluding Middlemarch. Jewel caskets after Middlemarch. The future of an allusion -- 6. Grace: the birth of breeding. Male beauty contests: Daphnis and Chloe and Wuthering Heights. The wild boy of Aveyron: Itard's diary and Shuttuck's The forbidden experiment. Coats and tales: Joseph in Hebrew scriptures, Midrash and Koran. Joseph and Daphis: Fielding's Joseph Andrews. Beauty in the beast: Wuthering Heights. Wild in the third story: Jane Eyre. Foundling of low birth: Great Expectations-- 7. Delicacy: the flower of health. Delicate beauty goes out: George Eliot's Adam Bede. Lilies exposed: Dinah and Susanna in Hebrew scriptures, Apocrypha, and Midrash. Crimson rose: Hetty Sorrel. Scarlet rose: Hester Prynne. Lily is rose: Dinah and Hetty. The certain beauty of health: Gissing's The odd women. The delicacy of health: Hardy's Jude the obscure -- 8. Conclusions: beauty beyond description. Beast in the beauty: The picture of Dorian Gray. Arrowy nose in short tense flight, eyes like drenched violets: Woolf's Orlando.".
- catalog title "The character of beauty in the Victorian novel / by Lori Hope Lefkovitz.".
- catalog type "Criticism, interpretation, etc. fast".
- catalog type "text".