Unsex'd revolutionaries : five women novelists of the 1790s / Eleanor Ty.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781442682962 (e-book)
- English fiction -- Women authors -- History and criticism
- Politics and literature -- Great Britain -- History -- 18th century
- Women and literature -- Great Britain -- History -- 18th century
- Revolutionary literature, English -- History and criticism
- English fiction -- 18th century -- History and criticism
- Political fiction, English -- History and criticism
- France -- History -- Revolution, 1789-1799 -- Foreign public opinion, British
- France -- History -- Revolution, 1789-1799 -- Literature and the revolution
- 823.6099287 20
- PR858.W6 .T9 1993
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Colombo | Available | CBEBK70003423 | ||||
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Jaffna | Available | JFEBK70003423 | ||||
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Kandy | Available | KDEBK70003423 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
Using historical and feminist psycho-linguistic studies as a base, Ty explores some of the complexities encountered in the writings of Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Hays, Helen Maria Williams, Elizabeth Inchbald, and Charlotte Smith
Includes index.
Description based on print version record.
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI : ProQuest, 2016. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest affiliated libraries.
Reviews provided by Syndetics
CHOICE Review
This study, like Ruth Salvaggio's Enlightened Absence (CH, Oct'89), is an example of what Gayatri Spivak might call "essentialist, humanist, deconstructivist feminism." Working back and forth between French feminist theory and studies of women's psycho-sexual development by Nancy Chodorow and Carol Gilligan, Ty discovers many correspondences between these recent feminist findings of women's linguistic and psychic differences from men and the probing fictions of 1790s British women writers. This decade is rich in female novelistic experiments, and an investigation, like the present one of novels by Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Hays, Helen Maria Williams, Elizabeth Inchbald, and Charlotte Smith, is certainly needed. Readers will have to decide for themselves whether they find Ty's rather heavy-handed interpretive apparatus illuminating or obfuscatory. The best chapter analyzes Inchbald's A Simple Story, a novel that might have been designed to illustrate Ty's argument about the Law of the Father. One can regret that the book as a whole reads more like a series of commentaries on selected novels than a well-integrated study of women's literary production in the period, and that the individual readings in general bring so little news. Advanced undergraduate; graduate; faculty.There are no comments on this title.