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    Rowland Hughes

    ... | Ayuda. Using the Morse key. Autores: Rowland Hughes; Localización: Times literary supplement, TLS, ISSN 0307-661X, Nº 5038, 1999 , pag. 26. © 2001-2010 Universidad de La Rioja · Todos los derechos reservados. XHTML 1.0; UTF‑8.
    Copyright 2001. Reproduced with permission of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc., Westport, CT. http://www.greenwood.com
    Copyright Longman Press [Due to publisher restrictions, full text of this book is not available in the UHRA]
    Review of WIl Verhoeven's biography of Gilbert Imlay: Citizen of the World (London: Pickering and Chatto, 2008)
    ... noir. "Charlie Oakley may resemble these char-acters in his quasi-Freudian compulsion to repeat the past, but his specific nos-talgia has historical dimensions, pointing to a nineteenth-century, hierarchical society.... more
    ... noir. "Charlie Oakley may resemble these char-acters in his quasi-Freudian compulsion to repeat the past, but his specific nos-talgia has historical dimensions, pointing to a nineteenth-century, hierarchical society. Hence the ...
    Research Interests:
    In 1781, James Yates, a farmer in upstate New York, brutally murdered his family while suffering from a “religious delusion.” Fifteen years later, in 1796, The New York Weekly Magazine published an anonymously authored account of this... more
    In 1781, James Yates, a farmer in upstate New York, brutally murdered his family while suffering from a “religious delusion.” Fifteen years later, in 1796, The New York Weekly Magazine published an anonymously authored account of this episode, which in turn inspired Charles Brockden Brown’s novel Wieland. Previously unexamined newspaper reports of the original massacre uniformly link Yates’s violence to his religious identity as a Shaker. Shakerism’s emphasis on gender equality and rejection of patriarchal familial structures prefigured, in many ways, the republican ideological investment in women (particularly mothers) as repositories of virtue; thus, Yates’s crime can be understood as an early manifestation of a broader “crisis of masculinity” in the period. The 1796 account makes no mention of Yates’s Shakerism, but nevertheless participates in discourses of gender and nationhood; it memorializes the female victims, containing Yates’s “treasonous” violence against the family with...
    Research Interests:
    ... | Ayuda. Using the Morse key. Autores: Rowland Hughes; Localización: Times literary supplement, TLS, ISSN 0307-661X, Nº 5038, 1999 , pag. 26. © 2001-2010 Universidad de La Rioja · Todos los derechos reservados. XHTML 1.0; UTF‑8.