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References
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Ouida (Maria Louise Ramé), 1839-1908 · Female AuthorsBritish author of sensational fiction, historical romance, and children's books. She permanently moved to Italy when she was 32.
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September | 2012 | Non Solus Blog - PublishSep 24, 2012 · Ouida was the nom de plume of Maria Louise Ramé (1839-1908), a prolific English writer known primarily for her popular adventures and ...
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Meaning, origin and history of the name OuidaOuida (1839-1908), born Marie Louise Ramé to a French father. Ouida was a pseudonym that arose from her own childhood pronunciation of her middle name Louise.
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Remapping Ouida : her works, correspondence and social concernsThis thesis examines the popular and non-canonical Victorian novelist Ouida (Maria Louise de la Ramée) her relationship with her publishers and the reception of ...
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(DOC) "Ouida (1839 – 1908)" Featured New Woman - Academia.eduRenowned just as much for her eccentric lifestyle as for her highly popular fiction, Ouida's sensational existence has invited a considerable amount of ...
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[PDF] Remapping Ouida: Her Works, Correspondence and Social Concerns... Ouida died in 1908, the author still considers the English public of the day the coarsest and ugliest of all Europe. See 'The Wolseley Papers' held in the ...
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Ouida (Marie-Louise de la Ramée, 1839-1908) - The Victorian WebBackground. Decorated initial M. er father Louis Ramé, a Parisian émigré and occasional French teacher, married Susan Sutton, a pretty English wine-merchant's ...
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Ouida (Louise de la Ramée), English Victorian NovelistDec 24, 2024 · Ouida (1839 – 1908), born Marie Louise de la Ramée in Bury St. Edmunds, was the daughter of Louis Ramé and Susan Sutton. She owed her education ...Missing: family origins
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Ouida: Good or Bad, but Never Indifferent - Neglected BooksSep 25, 2015 · She was born Maria Louise Ramé, with a French father and English mother, in Bury St. Edmonds in 1839. She hated the town, which she considered ...Missing: family | Show results with:family
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“Dashwood's Drag; or, the Derby and What Came of it.” · Grolier ...Subject. Bentley's Miscellany XLV. W. Harrison Ainsworth, editor. Description. Ouida's lucrative career as an author began at the young age of twenty. She moved ...
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[PDF] Ouida's Publishing HistoryHer first novel, Held in Bondage (1863), was published by the Tinsley Brothers (1854-1887) and was also the only novel she printed with them, since she moved ...
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Title: Held in Bondage - Victorian Research Web3 volumes, post 8vo, 31s 6d. Serialization: New Monthly Magazine, January 1861 to June 1863 (monthly). Summary: Originally titled Granville de Vigne: A Tale of ...
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[PDF] Ouida (Marie Louise Ramé)Oct 21, 2015 · In January 1861 Granville de Vigne: A Tale of the Day began in the New Monthly Magazine (which. Harrison Ainsworth also owned and ran). The ...
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'Held in bondage'; or, Granville de Vigne, by Ouida - Internet ArchiveSep 8, 2016 · 'Held in bondage'; or, Granville de Vigne, by Ouida ; Publication date: 1863 ; Usage: Public Domain Mark 1.0 Creative Commons License publicdomain.
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[PDF] Ouida: a memoirsomething to Ouida's initiative and skill. As a writer of short stories Ouida shows herself a true artist, and as a critic of books and men reveals independence.
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Ouida | Victorian Novelist, Animal Rights Activist | BritannicaOuida (born Jan. 1, 1839, Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk, Eng.—died Jan. 25, 1908, Viareggio, Italy) was an English novelist, known for her extravagant melodramatic ...
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Ouida | Author - LibraryThingMarie Louise de la Ramée was born to a French father and an English mother. Her pen name of "Ouida" (WEE-da) was derived from a childish mispronunciation of the ...Missing: primary | Show results with:primary
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Under Two Flags (1867) - Valancourt BooksIn stockOuida's phenomenal success Under Two Flags was first published in book form in 1867 and remained in print continuously until the mid-twentieth century and ...
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Under Two Flags (1867) - Jess NevinsIt was successful historically, for the genre of French Foreign Legion stories begins with Under Two Flags. And it is successful as a reading experience. Under ...
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Ouida: the Fascination of Moral Laxity### Summary of Main Themes in Ouida's Fiction
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Femininity and Feminism in Ouida's Novels | The VictorianistMay 30, 2017 · Many of her creations anticipate the New Woman (a term Ouida is credited with coining), reject traditional gender roles, question marriage, or live active, ...Missing: themes analysis
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The Aesthetic Novel, from Ouida to Firbank (Chapter 1) - A History of ...... Ouida herself employs in a strenuous effort to transform the Victorian romance into a remarkably innovative – because aesthetically excessive – literary object.
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[PDF] Impure Researches, or Literature, Marketing and Aesthesis The ...Like many of her contemporaries, the nineteenth-century popular author. Ouida (1839-1908) took up Kant's valorisation of individual aesthesis and its political ...
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[PDF] Ouida As Social Barometer Of The Victorian Era - eGroveOuida (Marie Louise Ramé, later Marie Louise de la Ramée) was a highly successful. British author widely known for the high society novels she began ...Missing: Maria | Show results with:Maria
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Analysis of Ouida's Moths - Literary Theory and CriticismMay 10, 2025 · The book proves of interest to formalist critics, who recognize many traditional symbols, such as the moon, cherries, and roses, representing ...
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Evolving Social, Political, and Gender Concerns in Her Fiction (review)Aug 8, 2025 · Ouida's frank handling of female sexuality is completely at odds with the tenor of British realist fiction of the period: her fallen women never ...
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[PDF] Ouida (Marie Louise Ramé)Oct 21, 2015 · “Ouida” was the pen name of Marie Louise Ramé (it derived from her childhood pronunciation of. “Louise”). She was born on January 1, 1839 in ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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"Under Two Flags": the Publishing History of a Best-Seller - ProQuestEven the Athenaeum reviewer commented that Ouida's 'nonsense has a spirit and dash about it which keeps the reader from finding flaws or asking tions'.
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Under Two Flags - Wiley Online LibraryOuida may even have written Under Two Flags in a spirit of competition with the sensation novel ' s most famous practitioners. There is evidence, for example, ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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Moths by Ouida (review) - Johns Hopkins UniversityWhen Moths, Ouida's fifteenth novel, was first published, in 1880, it was savaged by critics like the anonymous reviewer from The Saturday. Review ...
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strong bad things”: Ouida, Walter Pater, and aestheticism in Dorothy ...May 26, 2021 · Ouida's aesthetic fictions have the power to influence Miriam's personal development and instigate her decisive casting off of the domestic femininity.
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[PDF] QUIDA [Marie Louise de la Rame] (1839-1908)Ouida was the enormously prolific and highly eccentric author of some forty-seven novels and collections of short stories, as well as numerous essays, ...
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Ada Calhoun on Ouida, The Most Famous Lady Novelist You've ...Jun 13, 2022 · Langston Hughes enjoyed her play of Under Two Flags.” Ouida enjoyed renewed popularity in the 1920s thanks to support from Carl Van Vechten, ...
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[PDF] Writing for their lives: women applicants to The Royal Literary Fund16 Ouida (Case No. 2714) received £50 from Tinsley for her 1863 novel Held in Bondage, and Barbara Hofland's The Son of a Genius, which went through fifty ...
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Tag: copyright - Greenwich BlogsAug 25, 2013 · Three years later, Ouida was to sell her copyright outright to Chapman for less than £150. ... In the absence of international copyright ...Missing: loss | Show results with:loss
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Ouida's animalist stance in her life and in her works - AnimotSep 7, 2021 · Ouida's opinions were pioneering not only in matter of vivisection and cruelty to animals. She had fresh and genuine thoughts on how a dog ...Missing: campaigns | Show results with:campaigns
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Medicine, Crime and Realism in Ouida's 'Toxin' (1895) - MDPIOuida's 'Toxin' depicts a surgeon murdering a patient, which the medical establishment viewed as an attack, and the story uses medical realism to blur fiction ...
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Views and Opinions by Ouida - Project GutenbergCould that sense of solidarity of community between animals and ourselves, which is so strongly realised by Pierre Loti, be communicated to the multitude of ...
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Ouida (1839-1908) | Humanist HeritageOuida was the pen name of Marie Louise Ramée, born in 1839 in the Suffolk market town of Bury St Edmunds to Anglo-French parentage. Her pseudonym is widely ...Missing: family origins
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THE SYMPATHETIC INDIVIDUALIST: OUIDA'S LATE WORK AND ...May 18, 2011 · In 1882, Ouida began to write literary criticism together with analyses and commentaries on the politics of the state and the organisation of ...Missing: achievements | Show results with:achievements
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Ouida - Freedom From Religion FoundationJan 1, 1980 · Ouida, a novelist, animal rights activist and freethinker, was born Maria Louisa Ramé in Bury St. Edmunds, England.
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Ouida: The Dog-Intoxicated Novelist - University of LondonOct 4, 2018 · Ouida (born Maria Louisa Ramé, 1839-1908) was one of the most prominent writers of her generation, with over fifty bestselling titles including novels, short ...
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[PDF] Medical science and the Cruelty to Animals Act 1876For anti-vivisection protestors it was positive proof of the influence of their campaigns, yet overly deferent to Britain's scientific elite. In previous ...
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“The moral influence of those cruelties”: The vivisection debate ...The Cruelty to Animals Act was received with discontent on all sides. Vivisection's opponents saw the bill as too lenient and as essentially legalizing the very ...
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Ouida | Research Starters - EBSCOOuida, born Marie Louise Ramée in 1839, was an English novelist known for her romantic and often glamorous storytelling. She adopted the pseudonym Ouida, ...Missing: origins | Show results with:origins
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OUIDA'S LIFE ENDS IN ABJECT MISERY.; Novelist, Who Earned a ...The immediate cause of death is set down as asthma complicated by heart disease. Ouida had a passionate fondness for dogs, and up to the very last was ...
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Ouida - Biography and Works - Land of TalesWidely known by the pseudonym Ouida, Maria Louise Ramé was born in Bury St. Edmunds, England, on January 1, 1839, to Louis Ramé and Sarah Sutton.Missing: education | Show results with:education
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The Official Ouida Starter Guide - Victorian Popular Fiction Associationto say nothing of her short stories — and much of the European continent. Here, ...Missing: career | Show results with:career
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[PDF] Aestheticism and Sensation | Talia SchafferIn the 1860s Ouida's early novels used sensation tropes, with dashing adventure stories, seductions, and aristo- crats with sexual secrets.
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Modern Sentimentalism: Feeling, Femininity, and Female Authorship ...1895 article, Cather identifies Ouida (Maria Louise Ramé) as “one of the brightest minds of the last generation,” then declares that, despite Ouida's potential, ...
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Modernism and the Challenge to the Real (I)I identify the genesis of aesthetic fiction in Ouida's ostentatious romances and its scholarly development in Pater's superbly studied prose before turning to ...
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Acidity, Canonicity, and Popular Victorian Female AuthorsEven apologists for Ouida who have some sympathy with her literary and social programmes adopt a defensive or ironic tone in their discussions of her work. In a ...
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Identification Crises: Victorian Women and Wayward ReadingI argue that the constant anxiety expressed by Victorian writers about women's ... Ouida also opposed higher education for women on the grounds that it ...
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[PDF] Jane Jordan and Andrew King, eds. Ouida and Victorian Popular ...A newly resurgent interest in Victorian women's writing, particularly sensation fiction, popular novels, and aesthetic texts, created contexts in which Ouida's.Missing: reassessment | Show results with:reassessment
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[PDF] VICTORIAN WOMEN WRITERS AND THE WOMAN QUESTIONSally Mitchell describes the popularity of Ouida's Moths in 1880 with ''serious young women'' who. ''spoke of it in the same breath with Villette or Ruth.''¹⁸ A ...
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Margaret Mayo - Women Film Pioneers Project - Columbia UniversityHaving already adapted Ouida's novel Under Two Flags in 1901 so she could play the role of Cigarette, Mayo's new coup de théâtre prompted an almost ...
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Category: Under Two Flags - phantom empiresFeb 9, 2016 · UNDER TWO FLAGS is without a doubt her most famous novel, having been produced as a stage play, and four film adaptations, in 1912, 1916 ...
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Under Two Flags (1936) - IMDbRating 6.4/10 (541) Fourth film adaptation of the romance/adventure novel by Ouida. Ronald Colman stars as Sgt. Victor, a member of the French Foreign Legion. He's assigned to a ...
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A Dog of Flanders by Ouida (1923 Hodge-Podge Hardcover without ...It has been the basis of at least 11 Film, TV & Theater adaptations from 1914 through 2011. Hardcover has green cloth boards with black lettering & designs ...
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Ouida's A Dog of Flanders, and other stories is object ... - FacebookIt has seen many adaptations including English-language film versions in 1935, 1959, and 1999 and a popular animated television series in Japan in 1975. More ...Missing: theater | Show results with:theater<|separator|>