This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: "Illegitimacy in fiction" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message) This article relies excessively on references to primary sources. Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources. Find sources: "Illegitimacy in fiction" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

This is a list of fictional stories in which illegitimacy features as an important plot element. Passing mentions are omitted from this article. Many of these stories explore the social pain and exclusion felt by illegitimate "natural children".

Illegitimacy was a common theme in Victorian literature. "Illegitimacy was a popular subject for Victorian writers, not only because of its value as a plot device, but also because of the changing laws affecting illegitimate children and their parents which kept the topic in the public eye."[1]

Written works

[edit]
Shakespeare
Middleton
Massinger
Franklin
Fielding
Voltaire
Austen
Dumas, père
Herzen
Hawthorne
Gaskell
Dickens
Trollope
Dumas, fils
Eliot
Collins
Hugo
Tolstoy
Daudet
Turgenev
Dostoyevsky
Hardy
James
Prus
Caine
Conrad
Linnankoski
Wright
Forster
Pagnol
Faulkner
Irving
Martin
Hobb

Pre-Victorian

[edit]

Victorian

[edit]

Twentieth century

[edit]

Musicals

[edit]

Music

[edit]

Films

[edit]

Television

[edit]

Manga, anime, comic, game

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ "Representations of illegitimacy in Wilkie Collins's early novels", Philological Quarterly, 22 March 2004. [1]
  2. ^ Voltaire, Candide, or Optimism: A Fresh Translation, Backgrounds, Criticism, translated and edited by Robert M. Adams, 2nd ed., New York, W.W. Norton & Company, 1991, ISBN 0-393-96058-7, p. 1.
  3. ^ Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, p. 161.
  4. ^ Michael Gorra writes: "Esther Summerson is an illegitimate child. She lives under an alias and is told by an aunt that she has inherited her unknown mother's shame. Later we learn that she has also gotten her mother's beauty, the beauty of a woman who has schooled herself into a frightening hauteur and is now known as Lady Dedlock." Michael Gorra, "Being Dickens" (review of Robert Douglas-Fairhurst, The Turning Point: 1851—A Year That Changed Charles Dickens and the World, Knopf, 2022, 357 pp.), The New York Review of Books, vol. LXIX, no. 7 (21 April 2022), pp. 50, 54–55. (quotation, pp. 54–55.
  5. ^ Charles A. Moser, The Cambridge History of Russian Literature (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992) pp. 229–230.
  6. ^ Robert Gottlieb, "'Make 'Em Cry, Make 'Em Laugh, Make 'Em Wait'", The New York Review of Books, vol. LXIV, no. 10 (8 June 2017), pp. 25–28.
  7. ^ "Representations of illegitimacy in Wilkie Collins's early novels", Philological Quarterly, 22 March 2004.[2]
  8. ^ Monika Piątkowska, Prus: Śledztwo biograficzne (Prus: A Biographical Investigation), Kraków, Wydawnictwo Znak, 2017, p. 262.
  9. ^ Monika Piątkowska, Prus: Śledztwo biograficzne (Prus: A Biographical Investigation), Kraków, Wydawnictwo Znak, 2017, p. 262.
  10. ^ Monika Piątkowska, Prus: Śledztwo biograficzne (Prus: A Biographical Investigation), Kraków, Wydawnictwo Znak, 2017, pp. 262–63.
  11. ^ Linnankosken Pakolaiset oli avainromaani Lapinlahdelta (in Finnish)
  12. ^ J. I. M. Stewart, Joseph Conrad, pp. 185–87.

References

[edit]