41 research outputs found
The female professional as orphan in Charlotte Riddellâs A Struggle for Fame
In Charlotte Riddellâs A Struggle for Fame (1883), motherless Glenarva Westley becomes a professional novelist to support first her financially ruined father, and then her insolvent husband. This article examines the impact of Glenâs father and husband on her development as not only an author, but also as an autonomous person, and reads A Struggle for Fame as a novel in which independence, creativity and productivity, as well as contentment, are threatened by emotional and familial commitments. Neither Glenâs father nor husband deliberately hinder her professional progress, but the financial and emotional drains they place on her outweigh their attempts at support. The novel concerns the worldly themes of business and professionalism for which Riddell was famous, and some of the especial difficulties encountered by women in the public sphere and the marketplace. It also, however, explores more universal existential anxieties about selfhood and the subordination of duty to oneself to duty to oneâs family. Significantly, Glenâs greatest professional successes are coupled with the deaths of her father and husband, who due to his age and demeanour acts as a father figure, meaning that Riddell effectively shows Glen to be twice-orphaned, and so twice liberated from family constraints
Desiree\u27s Baby
âDĂ©sirĂ©eâs Babyâ is Kate Chopinâs short story, set before the American Civil War, about a baby and a racial crisis between a husband and wife. For over half a century, it has been one of Chopinâs most popular stories. [Description from The Kate Chopin International Society]