Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Christina Rossetti
- 1830-1894
- Unconventional environment
in childhood home
- Highly politicised atmosphere
- Home-schooled with
sister by mother
- Lit. and poetry essential to household
- Early influences:
- Keats
- Pope
- Walter Scott
- Dante Alighieri
- Charles Maturin
- Followed
mother's religion
- Devout Anglo-Catholics
- Strong relationship with God
- Developed depression
in adolescence
- Suffered a breakdown in 1845, aged 15
- Various
romantic affairs
- Did not marry
- Died of Graves' disease
- Poetic features
- Both secular and devotional
- 'Imaginative arenas
where gods meet
mankind'
- Conflicts drawn on
a small scale
- Ordinary daily events
transformed by
magical potential
- Fairytale worlds
- Fascinating
to Victorian
readers
- Feminist principles
- Significance
of sisterhood
- Female resistance & empowerment
- Themes
- Rejected/unrequited
love
- Hope in grief
- Resignation to will of God
- Reserved anguish
- Precisely
honed
craftmanship
- Complex ideas within formal confines
- Veiled social criticism
- Pre-Raphaelite
Brotherhood
- Set up by brother Dante
Gabriel and friends
- Engaged
to James
Collinson
- Irreconcilable
religious differences
- Christina's
poems
published
in
magazine,
1850
- Garnered critical praise
- Otherwise peripheral presence
- Publication & success
- Devotional prose-works
very popular
- A way for theological
women to
participate in clergy
discussions
- Goblin
Market and
Other Poems
- Critical and commercial success
- Reclaiming of
'fallen' women
- Women's
place in lit.
marketplace
negotiated by
men -
challenged
- Some work not
published until 1979
- Often presented her
work as for children