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Charlotte Bront and Contagion: Myths, Memes, and the Politics of Infection (Palgrave Studies in Literature, Science and Medicine)
3031651391 rar This book argues for the significance of contagious disease in critical and biographical assessment of Charlotte Bronts work. Waugh argues that contagion, infection, and quarantining strategies are central themes in Jane Eyre (1847), Shirley (1849), and Villette (1853). This book establishes the ways in which Charlotte Bront was closely engaged with the political and social contexts in which she wrote, extending this to the representation and metaphorical import of illness in Bronts novels. Waugh also posits that although miasmatic theories are often assumed to have been entirely in the ascendant in the late 1840s, the relationship between miasma and contagion was a complex one and contagion in fact remained a crucial way for Charlotte Bront to represent disease itself, as well as to explore the relationships between the individual and social, political, and cultural contexts. Contagion and its metaphors are central to Charlotte Bronts construction of subjectivity and of the responsibilities of the individual and the group. Read more