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Christina Rossetti's Goblin Market

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Mendoza, Victor Roman. “‘Come Buy’: The Crossing of Sexual and Consumer Desire in Christina Rossetti's ‘Goblin Market.’” ELH, vol. 73, no. 4, 2006, pp. 913–947. JSTOR, JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/30030043. Accessed 9 Mar 2018. This source shows insights into the new consumer world of industrial times. Comments about Lizzie’s consumer agency provide evidence for the power of advertising as the goblins consistently chant the phrase “Come Buy”. Also the source describes an allure of the exotic people and the goods that they offer to society. The source also explores the Lizzie and Laura fantasize about the origin of the fruits, being overly ambitious with their guesses. The article advances the value of promoting products in order to …show more content…

A risk is demonstrated of how if a women enters the consumer world, she herself could become an object of consumption. It is also noted that jealousy regarding male partnership among females can be assumed. The article discusses women's roles further as the author accounts for the many other pieces of literature contesting to women role as a consumer and the potential risks a women may face when subject to market men. Women as a shadow figure of a prostitute is mentioned throughout the article, displaying how women active in the consumer world are thought of in society. The article states how women are vulnerable resulting in their innocence quickly stripped away with the presence of powerful consumerism. From the article one can conclude that women should resist the temptations and curiosities of the consumer market in order to remain apart of the private home …show more content…

Expectations of women in the market place are highlighted by Campbell through his discussion of gender roles. This article also provides insight into Rossetti’s life in beginning a discussion of why she wrote the poem and what she was attempting to communicate through “Goblin Market”. Christina Rossetti’s “Goblin Market”, is a poem in which the meanings of the storyline have multiple different perspectives by scholars. My perspective is that the poem is about the power of consumerism and how it can influence individuals everyday life. The Victorian Era, which this poem was written in, was a time of new technologies and perspectives. The emergence of the market place and consumerism started many moralist to examine the daily routines of individuals, to share the risks of becoming apart of this new economic system. Gender roles were questioned and consumerism thrived within society. Christina Rossetti’s “Goblin Market”, alludes to the issues of Victorian society related to consumerism and gender, and provides readers an awareness to the dangers of consumerism through fiction. Rossetti provides evidence for the deceptions and seductions of the capitalist market place throughout the poem. The cry of the merchant men is mentioned many times throughout the articles which I used for research. Since this section of the poem is emphasized throughout so many articles, I will be sure to mention this idea within my paper. These articles

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