by NormaClarke (Author)
If Aphra Benn is widely regarded as the first important woman writer in English, who was the second? In literary history, the eighteenth century belongs to men: Pope and Swift, Richardson and Fielding. Asked to name a woman, even the specialist stumbles. Jane Austen? She didn't publish until 1811. Aphra Benn herself? She died in 1869. The Rise and Fall of the Woman of Letters tells the remarkable but little-known story of women writers in the eighteenth century - of poets, critics, dramatists and scholars celebrated in their own time but all but forgotten by the beginning of the new century. Eliza Haywood, Catherine Cockburn, Elizabeth Elstob, Delarivier Manley, Elizabeth Rowe, Jane Barker, Elizabeth Thomas, Anna Seward... In a book which ranges from country house to Grub Street, Norma Clarke recovers these and other writers, establishes the reasons for their eclipse and discovers that a room of one's own in the eighteenth century was as likely to be a prison cell as a boudoir.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 400
Publisher: Pimlico
Published: 27 May 2004
ISBN 10: 071266467X
ISBN 13: 9780712664677
Book Overview: While many nineteenth-century women writers - such as George Eliot, Mrs Gaskell, the Brontes - are now widely written about, the women who paved the way for them in the eighteenth-century are only now being given the attention they deserve.