Wilkie Collins’ The Woman in White
Available Section
- Offered for
-
Summer
- Section
-
24U1
- Schedule
- Day
- Wed
- Times
- 06:00 pm—07:30 pm
- Dates
- —
- Type
-
Discussion
- Location
-
Online
- Taught by
- Cynthia Rutz
The “woman in white” of the title is a mysterious young woman in distress whom art teacher Walter Hartright attempts to help. Much like The Moonstone, the story is an early detective novel told by multiple narrators, causing readers to have to put the pieces together themselves. Like his friend Charles Dickens, Collins was a crusader for social justice, so he also uses the novel to showcase the parlous legal and financial status of women at the time. The sensational plot involves mistaken identities, family secrets, amnesia, and an insane asylum. It became one of the most popular novels of the 19th century, so much so that Wilke Collins had his tombstone inscribed: "Author of The Woman In White". For the first class, please read Part the First, the first two narrative (by Walter Hartright and Vincent Gilmore)."
Course Outline
Notes
Online registration closes August 29 at 5 pm CT.
All Graham School courses use Canvas to distribute files and announcements. You will receive an invitation to join Canvas about a week before your course begins. Remote courses require you to login to Canvas to access the Zoom Classroom. Please visit the Liberal Arts Remote Learning Resources page to find step by step instructions for Canvas and Zoom.