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Elizabeth Gaskell Critical Essay | Critical Essay by Carol A. Martin

This literature criticism consists of approximately 23 pages of analysis & critique of Elizabeth Gaskell.
This section contains 6,683 words
(approx. 23 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell - Critical Essay by Carol A. Martin

Critical Essay by Carol A. Martin

SOURCE: "Gaskell's Ghosts: Truths in Disguise," in Studies in the Novel, Vol. 21, No. 1, Spring, 1989, pp. 27-40.

In the following essay, Martin discusses the role of the supernatural in Gaskell's novels and shorter works.

"Do you believe in ghosts?" someone is supposed to have asked Madame du Deffand, to which she replied, "No . . . but I am afraid of them."1

If that question had been posed to Elizabeth Gaskell a hundred years later, she might have responded similarly: "No, but I write stories about them, I tell tales of them by my friends' firesides, and I have seen them." For Gaskell, not unlike Madame du Deffand and many others before and since, is ambivalent—admittedly superstitious and yet a woman of great common sense and considerable knowledge. A cousin of Charles Darwin and a devout Unitarian, in the mid-century crisis of faith she repudiated neither science nor...
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This section contains 6,683 words
(approx. 23 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell - Critical Essay by Carol A. Martin
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Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell - Critical Essay by Carol A. Martin from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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