Fear of the Future: Victorian Childhood's EvolutionMain MenuIntroductionChildhoodSection IntroductionMoralitySection IntroductionGender and Victorian ChildhoodSection IntroductionClass and Victorian ChildhoodSection IntroductionColonial Child and Victorian ChildhoodSection IntroductionTimelineBibliography, References, and Further ReadingsLaura Fitzpatrick9f1bb1740dab097ebf17c64d01d58ab175a1992c
"A Story for Children" by Catharine Welch
12016-11-23T11:49:12-05:00Laura Fitzpatrick9f1bb1740dab097ebf17c64d01d58ab175a1992c617Gender Sectionplain2016-12-16T14:17:04-05:00Laura Fitzpatrick9f1bb1740dab097ebf17c64d01d58ab175a1992cClass and Victorian ChildhoodSection IntroductionIn her story styled particularly for children, Catharine Welch writes in 1906 about a girl and her brother and the girl’s cloth puppy. The girl is loving and caring and sweet, whilst the boy digs in the dirt and is seen as unemotional and daring. This story very distinctly separates the genders in two distinct fields in even greater detail than in the earlier works.
This page has paths:
12016-11-23T11:46:32-05:00Laura Fitzpatrick9f1bb1740dab097ebf17c64d01d58ab175a1992cGender and Victorian ChildhoodLaura Fitzpatrick8Section Introductionplain18582016-12-16T16:12:31-05:00Laura Fitzpatrick9f1bb1740dab097ebf17c64d01d58ab175a1992c