The Bearkeeper's Daughter

How does Bradshaw present the mood of the city, Constantinople, in the novel, The Bearkeeper’s Daughter?

The Bearkeeper’s Daughter

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The society Bradshaw presents is one of surface harmony, but tensions lurk beneath a facade of prosperity and glamour. In this novel Bradshaw draws attention to the role of religion in politics, expressed by the split between the eastern and western orthodoxies of the powerful Christian church. This is also a society that practices slavery. The social hierarchy thus extends from the pinnacle of tyrannical power, represented by Emperor Justinian and his empress Theodora, to the depths of the slave who is bought and sold as property.

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