@article{oai:kobe-c.repo.nii.ac.jp:00002187, author = {溝口, 薫 and MIZOGUCHI, KAORU}, journal = {女性学評論, Women's studies forum}, month = {Mar}, note = {P(論文), In his novels of the middle period after Dombey and Son, Dickens shows more concern with the plights of middle class women as well as with their interiority struggling with and disrupted by their situation. Such concern, howeverm, does not make Dickens an advocator for women, nor indicates that his understanding of woman as the other has become deeper. Rather, this means that so much more serious has become his apprehension of the contemporary society with its disruptive influences upon the interiority of the individuals including women's. To Dickens, the women characters are the more effective and convenient instruments with which he can convey his own insights into the predicament of the modern self. In this brief study, I will take up Miss Wada in Little Dorrit, one and the last of the type newly introduced in the period who articulates the plight and emotion but usually looks strongly repressive, so that I may clarify the author's socio-psychological concerns well developed in her.}, pages = {77--87}, title = {(研究ノート)Miss Wadeの〈監獄〉ー Dickensの抑制的な女性 (1)}, volume = {9}, year = {1995}, yomi = {ミゾグチ, カオル} }