Sentimental Memorials : Women and the Novel in Literary History.
Material type: TextPublisher: Palo Alto : Stanford University Press, 2014Copyright date: ©2014Description: 1 online resource (199 pages)Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9780804792790Subject(s): English fiction -- 18th century -- History and criticism | English fiction -- Women authors -- History and criticism | Sentimentalism in literature | Women and literature -- England -- History -- 18th centuryGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: Sentimental Memorials : Women and the Novel in Literary HistoryDDC classification: 823.5099287 LOC classification: PR858Online resources: Click to ViewIntro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Chapter 1: Sophia Lee's Historical Sensibility -- Chapter 2: Reading and Remembering Ann Radcliffe -- Chapter 3: Charlotte Smith's Literary Exile -- Chapter 4: Mary Robinson and the Wreath of Fame -- Epilogue -- Notes -- Index.
During the later eighteenth century, changes in the meaning and status of literature left popular sentimental novels stranded on the margins of literary history. While critics no longer dismiss or ignore these works, recent reassessments have emphasized their interventions in various political and cultural debates rather than their literary significance. Sentimental Memorials, by contrast, argues that sentimental novels gave the women who wrote them a means of clarifying, protesting, and finally memorializing the historical conditions under which they wrote. As women writers successfully navigated the professional marketplace but struggled to position their works among more lasting literary monuments, their novels reflect on what the elevation of literature would mean for women's literary reputations. Drawing together the history of the novel, women's literary history, and book history, Melissa Sodeman revisits the critical frameworks through which we have understood the history of literature. Novels by Sophia Lee, Ann Radcliffe, Charlotte Smith, and Mary Robinson, she argues, offer ways of rethinking some of the signal literary developments of this period, from emerging notions of genius and originality to the rise of an English canon. And in Sodeman's analysis, novels long seen as insufficiently literary acquire formal and self-historicizing importance.
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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2018. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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