![]() ![]() One critic has suggested that Marian and Fosco might be considered the true protagonists of The Woman in White. When Hartright returns from Honduras to restore Laura's true identity, he brings tactics he had first used "against suspected treachery in the wilds of Central America" to "the heart of civilised London." Why is he forced to work outside the laws and conventions of society to achieve his aim? Why did he have to leave England and return in order to make this change?ĥ. Why is Marian so mesmerized by Fosco, who she says "has interested me, has attracted me, has forced me to like him"? Why is Fosco able to see Marian, despite her physical unattractiveness, as a "magnificent creature"?Ĥ. In the novel, how is pedigree intertwined with deception and immorality? Where do the lines blur between servants and the served? How are the underprivileged used as a screen for viewing the upper-crust characters?ģ. But Collins lived a life on the periphery of respectable English society that his father would not have condoned. "You will make aristocratic connections that will be of the greatest use to you in life," Collins's father told him when he started school. ![]() ![]() How does her double, Anne Catherick, illuminate the dark side of that ideal?Ģ. ![]() Laura is presented as an ideal of Victorian womanhood, obedient, respectful of social conventions, and willing to sacrifice her own wishes for others. ( Below you'll find two sets of questions: one from Penguin and the other from Random House.)ġ. ![]()
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