These are the sources and citations used to research Motherhood Literature. This bibliography was generated on Cite This For Me on
In-text: (Cassells Household Guide, 1869)
Your Bibliography: 1869. Cassells Household Guide. 1st ed. London, p.140.
In-text: (Abrams, 2013)
Your Bibliography: Abrams, L., 2013. Ideals of Womanhood in Victorian Britain. [ebook] p.1. Available at: <http://classwithmpenton.weebly.com/uploads/1/3/6/3/13638874/janeeyreidealsofwomanhoodactivity.pdf> [Accessed 20 April 2022].
In-text: (Anolik, 2003)
Your Bibliography: Anolik, R., 2003. The Missing Mother: The Meanings of Maternal Absence in the Gothic Mode. Modern Language Studies, [online] 33(1/2), p.36. Available at: <https://www.jstor.org/stable/3195306?seq=13> [Accessed 28 April 2022].
In-text: (Baillie, 2022)
Your Bibliography: Baillie, J., 2022. A Mother to Her Waking Infant by Joanna Baillie | Poetry Foundation. [online] Poetry Foundation. Available at: <https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/51897/a-mother-to-her-waking-infant> [Accessed 25 April 2022].
In-text: (Blackstone, Christian and Waite, 1807)
Your Bibliography: Blackstone, W., Christian, E. and Waite, T., 1807. Commentaries on the laws of England. 1st ed. London, p.80.
In-text: (Braddon, Taylor and Crofts, 1998)
Your Bibliography: Braddon, M., Taylor, J. and Crofts, R., 1998. Lady Audley's secret. London: Penguin, pp.58-59.
In-text: (Bronte, 1996)
Your Bibliography: Bronte, A., 1996. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (Revised). London: Penguin Books.
In-text: (Browne, 1987)
Your Bibliography: Browne, P., 1987. Heroines of popular culture. 1st ed. Bowling Green: Bowling Green State Univ. Popular Press, p.14.
In-text: (Burman, 2016)
Your Bibliography: Burman, S., 2016. Fit Work for Women. 1st ed. [London]: Routledge.
In-text: (Freud, 1962)
Your Bibliography: Freud, S., 1962. Civilization and its discontents. New York: W.W. Norton, pp.1-109.
In-text: (Friedan, 1990)
Your Bibliography: Friedan, B., 1990. The feminine mystique. 1st ed. New York: Dell.
In-text: (Hirsch, 1993)
Your Bibliography: Hirsch, M., 1993. The mother-daughter plot. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, p.14.
In-text: (Holcombe, 1983)
Your Bibliography: Holcombe, L., 1983. Wives and property. Toronto: Univ. of Toronto Pr, p.33.
In-text: (Lee, 2008)
Your Bibliography: Lee, M., 2008. A Mother Outlaw Vindicated: Social Critique in Anne Brontë's The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. Nineteenth century Gender studies, [online] (4.3). Available at: <http://www.ncgsjournal.com/issue43/lee.html> [Accessed 25 April 2022].
In-text: (McKnight, 1997)
Your Bibliography: McKnight, N., 1997. Suffering mothers in mid-Victorian novels. Basingstoke: Macmillan, p.33.
In-text: (Showalter, 1985)
Your Bibliography: Showalter, E., 1985. Female malady. London: Virago, p.5.
In-text: (Wagner, 2020)
Your Bibliography: Wagner, T., 2020. The Victorian baby in print. London: Oxford University Press, p.243.
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