In this exploration of the significance of illness in the Victorian literary imagination Miriam Bailin maps the cultural implications and narrative effects of the sickroom as an important symbolic space in nineteenth-century life and literature. Dr Bailin draws on non-fictional accounts of illness by Julia Stephen, Harriet Martineau and others to illuminate the presentation of illness and ministration, patient and nurse, in the fiction of Charlotte Brontë, Charles Dickens and George Eliot. She argues that the sickroom functions as an imagined retreat from conflicts in Victorian society, and that fictional representations of illness serve to resolve both social conflict and aesthetic tension. Her concentration on the sickroom scene as a compositional response to insistent formal as well as social problems yields fresh readings of canonical works and approaches to the constituent elements of Victorian realist narrative.
""Life in the Sickroom: Essays"" is a collection of essays written by Harriet Martineau and published in 1844. The essays explore the experience of living with chronic illness and the impact it has...
This book provides guidance and inspiration for ministers who visit the sick and dying. Abbetmeyer offers a range of prayers, lessons, and meditations on themes such as hope, comfort, and healing...
Sermons From A Sickroom is a collection of religious sermons written by Alexander Mackennal and published in 1888. The sermons were written during a period when Mackennal was confined to his sickroom...