In this study I conduct an exploratory corpus-based study of nineteenth-century advice manuals for women with a view to investigating the ways in which these texts ideologically and discursively construct a model of socially acceptable female identity. The analysis is based on a corpus of twenty advice manuals published in Britain between 1810 and 1878. By combining a quantitative analysis of keywords with manual investigation of concordance lines containing the most frequent keywords, I examine the parameters within which the model of socially acceptable female identity is discursively constructed. My analysis shows that, by learning to control their bodies, voices and speech, nineteenth-century women readers internalised the model presented in advice literature in order to become desirable to men of a good social position (Armstrong 2014).
Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jana Kochanowskiego w Kielcach
oai:bibliotekacyfrowa.ujk.edu.pl:7993 ; doi:10.25951/4844
Token : A Journal of English Linguistics
Feb 14, 2023
Feb 13, 2023
26
https://bibliotekacyfrowa.ujk.edu.pl/publication/4844
Shvanyukova, Polina Bianchi, Marina Ożarska, Magdalena Newman, John G. Marczewska, Marzena