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THE LEGEND OF ELIZABETH SIDDAL In The Legend of Elizabeth Siddal,
first published fifteen years ago, Jan Marsh enlarged on the life of
one of the subjects of her earlier work, Pre-Raphaelite Sisterhood,
and delineated the true story of Elizabeth Siddal as an artist in her
own right separated from the ubiquitous historical images. Examples
were drawn from the Freudian revolution in the 1920s, the cinematic
melodrama of the 1930s, the social awakening of the 1940s and the
sexual liberation of the 1960s. Each of these eras fostered its own
Elizabeth Siddal myth, and in the process the coppery-haired poet and
painter changed from suicidal waif to ideal gentlewoman to feminist. |