A. Radcliffe wants to emphasize the happy ending of the marriage of emily and valancourt.
B. It frees radcliffe from a strict adherence to common life, allowing her to place emily in challenging situations.
C. Radcliffe considers her work a continuation of the sentimental novel of the 18th century.
D. It acknowledges the lack of supernatural plot tricks.
A. Daydreams
B. Aberrant mental states
C. Violence
D. Sexual rapacity
A. Both were successful because they followed the laws of nature.
B. Both refused to use science to do innovative work.
C. Both worked collaboratively.
D. Both suffered for their attempt to do divine work.
A. The anticipation of the violation of one’s person versus an act of physical violence
B. Plotted revenge versus random violence
C. The male gothic versus the female gothic
D. The persistence of the past in the present versus the betrayal in the present of the paternal protector
A. Emily is confronted with the duality of the human mind, at once rational and then mad.
B. Emily is tested regarding the guilt and ghosts of sins past.
C. Emily comes to understand the benefits of a clositered life.
D. Emily learns the story of sister agnes’s past.
A. It shows the possible dangers of science.
B. It exposes the deep flaws in medieval ways of thinking about the world.
C. It marks a return to more primitive ways of pre-enlightenment thought and expression.
D. It suggests that reason is more important than emotion.
A. Antonia
B. Charlotte perkins gilman
C. Jane eyre
D. Mina murray harker
A. Realism
B. An epistolary format
C. A focus on the individual
D. An english setting
A. It is a necessary part of the social order.
B. It is essentially fair.
C. It is monstrous.
D. It will naturally fall out of favor.
A. It is an ancestral estate.
B. It contains vault-like spaces.
C. It is located in england.
D. It is mysterious.