Grace Darling

Grace Darling
Author: Marianne Farningham
Publisher:
Total Pages: 312
Release: 1873
Genre:
ISBN:

A fictionalised version of the heroic Grace Darling story.

Grace Darling

Grace Darling
Author: George William MacArthur Reynolds
Publisher:
Total Pages: 340
Release: 1884
Genre:
ISBN:

Grace Darling, Heroine of the Farne Islands

Grace Darling, Heroine of the Farne Islands
Author: Marianne Farningham
Publisher: Good Press
Total Pages: 238
Release: 2019-12-05
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

This book is a biography of Grace Horsley Darling, an English lighthouse keeper's daughter. Her participation in the rescue of survivors from the shipwrecked Forfarshire in 1838 brought her national fame. The paddle steamer ran aground on the Farne Islands off the coast of Northumberland in northeast England; nine members of the crew were saved.

The Girl's Own

The Girl's Own
Author: Claudia Nelson
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 312
Release: 2010-06-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 0820336955

The eleven contributors to The Girl's Own explore British and American Victorian representations of the adolescent girl by drawing on such contemporary sources as conduct books, housekeeping manuals, periodicals, biographies, photographs, paintings, and educational treatises. The institutions, practices, and literatures discussed reveal the ways in which the Girl expressed her independence, as well as the ways in which she was presented and controlled. As the contributors note, nineteenth-century visions of girlhood were extremely ambiguous. The adolescent girl was a fascinating and troubling figure to Victorian commentators, especially in debates surrounding female sexuality and behavior. The Girl's Own combines literary and cultural history in its discussion of both British and American texts and practices. Among the topics addressed are the nineteenth-century attempt to link morality and diet; the making of heroines in biographies for girls; Lewis Carroll's and John Millais's iconographies of girlhood in, respectively, their photographs and paintings; genre fiction for and by girls; and the effort to reincorporate teenage unwed mothers into the domestic life of Victorian America.