Unbounded Attachment discusses a range of British women writers, from Mary Wollstonecraft to Jane Austen, and considers the political implications of the language of feeling they use in their work.
Unbounded Attachment discusses a range of British women writers, from Mary Wollstonecraft to Jane Austen, and considers the political implications of the language of feeling they use in their work.
Harriet Guest studied for her BA and PhD at King's College, Cambridge, where she also held a Junior Research Fellowship. She taught at University College London before moving to York where she is Professor of English and Related Literature. She is a founder member of York's interdisciplinary Centre for Eighteenth Century Studies. In recent years she has published widely in two areas; on eighteenth and early nineteenth-century British women's writing, which was the subject of her book, Small Change: Women, Learning, Patriotism, 1750-1810 (Chicago, 2000), and on British expansion in the South Pacific, which was the focus of her book, Empire, Barbarism, and Civilisation: James Cook, William Hodges, and the Return to the Pacific (Cambridge,2007).
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1: Charlotte Smith, Mary Robinson, and the War with France in 1793 2: Mary Robinson in the Metropolis 3: Remembering Mary Wollstonecraft 4: Amelia Alderson and Mrs Opie: 'more of the woman' 5: 'Inadvertencies and misconstructions': Jane Austen's heroines Conclusion
Introduction 1: Charlotte Smith, Mary Robinson, and the War with France in 1793 2: Mary Robinson in the Metropolis 3: Remembering Mary Wollstonecraft 4: Amelia Alderson and Mrs Opie: 'more of the woman' 5: 'Inadvertencies and misconstructions': Jane Austen's heroines Conclusion
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