Three victorian fictional images of volunteering

Conference paper


Wyatt, John 2008. Three victorian fictional images of volunteering. Voluntary Action History Society Third International Research Conference. University of Liverpool 16 - 18 Jul 2008
AuthorsWyatt, John
TypeConference paper
Abstract

Fictional depiction of volunteering in the second half of the nineteenth century in
Britain can, I believe, provide a commentary on social trends during this period of
rapid changes in social action. The three novels I have chosen to illustrate this
assertion (North and South, Tom Brown at Oxford, and Marcella) are considered in
the chronological order in which they were published. The novelists, Elizabeth
Gaskell, Thomas Hughes, and Mary Augusta Ward, as well as providing fictional
models of what is involved in the life of a volunteer, provide insight into three
different movements in the social theories underlying social action in the period.
The novelists themselves were involved in volunteering and in its organisation,
giving an extra dimension to the creation of their fictional worlds

Keywordsvolunteering; Fictional depiction of volunteering
Year2008
ConferenceVoluntary Action History Society Third International Research Conference
Accepted author manuscript
License
CC BY-ND
Publication dates
PrintJul 2008
Publication process dates
Deposited22 Feb 2012
Web address (URL)http://hdl.handle.net/10552/1461
Additional information

Citation:
Wyatt, John. (2008). Three victorian fictional images of volunteering. , Liverpool, London. Retrieved from http://www.uel.ac.uk/cis/documents/ThreeVictorianImagesofVolunteerin...

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