Download App
>> | LShop | >> | Book | >> | Fiction & Related It... | >> | Fiction-related Item... | >> | Mothers Of The Natio... |
ISBN
:
9780253213693
Publisher
:
Indiana University Press
Subject
:
Fiction-related Items, History, Sociology & Anthropology
Binding
:
PAPERBACK
Pages
:
192
Year
:
2002
₹
1618.0
₹
1618.0
Buy Now
Shipping charges are applicable for books below Rs. 101.0
View DetailsEstimated Shipping Time : 5-7 Business Days
View DetailsDescription
British women writers were enormously influential in the creation of public opinion and political ideology during the years from 1780 to 1830. Anne Mellor demonstrates the many ways in which they attempted to shape British public policy and cultural behavior in the areas of religious and governmental reform, education, philanthropy, and patterns of consumption. She argues that the theoretical paradigm of the "doctrine of the separate spheres"may no longer be valid. According to this view, British society was divided into distinctly differentiated and gendered spheres of public versus private activities in the 18th and 19th centuries,Surveying all the genres of literaturex2014;drama, poetry, fiction, non-fiction prose, and literary criticismx2014;Mellor shows how women writers promoted a new concept of the ideal woman as rationally educated, sexually self-disciplined, and above all, virtuous. This New Woman, these writers said, was better suited to govern the nation than were its current fiscally irresponsible, lecherous, and corruptible male rulers.Beginning with Hannah More, Mellor argues that women writers too often dismissed as conservative or retrogressive instead promoted a revolution in cultural mores or manners. She discusses writers as diverse as Elizabeth Inchbald, Hannah Cowley, and Joanna Baillie; as Charlotte Smith, Anna Barbauld, and Lucy Aikin; as Mary Wollstonecraft, Charlotte Reeve, and Anna Seward; and concludes with extended analyses of Charlotte Smith's Desmond and Jane Austen's Persuasion. She thus documents women writers' full participation in that very discursive public sphere which Habermas so famously restricted to men of property. Moreover, the new career of philanthropy defined by Hannah More provided a practical means by which women of all classes could actively construct a new British civil society, and thus become the mothers not only of individual households but of the nation as a whole.
Author Biography
Anne Mellor is Professor of English at UCLA, where she is a Faculty Affiliate at the Center for the Study of Women. She is author of Blake's Human Form Divine (1974), English Romantic Irony (1980), Mary Shelley: Her Life, Her Fiction, Her Monsters (1988), and Romanticism and Gender (1993).
Related Items
-
of