Criticism > Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism > Little Women - Sarah Elbert (essay date 1987)
Little Women - Sarah Elbert (essay date 1987)
Sarah Elbert (essay date 1987)
SOURCE: "Reading Little Women," in A Hunger for Home: Louisa May Alcott's Place in American Culture, Rutgers University Press, 1987, pp. 195-218.
[In the following chapter, Elbert identifies major themes in Alcott's work as exemplified in Little Women, tying them all to an ideal of "domestic democracy."
I may be strong-minded, but no one can say I'm out of my sphere now, for woman's special mission is supposed to be drying tears and bearing burdens. I'm to carry my share, Friedrich, and help to earn the home. Make up your mind to that, or I'll never go.
Jo March in Little Women, chapter 46
The title of Louisa May Alcott's most famous book is a common-place nineteenth-century expression. In the opening chapter, Marmee reads a Christmas letter from her absent husband to his daughters, which tenderly admonishes them to "conquer themselves so...
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Criticism
- Angela Brazil (review date 1922)
- Madeleine B. Stern (essay date 1943)
- Lavinia Russ (review date 1968)
- Kate Ellis (essay date 1977)
- Elizabeth Lennox Keyser (essay date 1982)
- Carolyn G. Heilbrun (essay date 1982)
- Nina Auerbach (essay date 1983)
- Anne Dalke (essay date 1985)
- Ruth K. MacDonald (essay date 1985)
- Sarah Elbert (essay date 1987)
- Beverly Lyon Clark (essay date 1989)
- Ellen Butler Donovan (essay date 1994)
- Christy Rishoi Minadeo (essay date 1994)
- Shirley Foster and Judy Simons (essay date 1995)
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