Politics and Genre in the Works of Elizabeth Hamilton, 1756–1816

Politics and Genre in the Works of Elizabeth Hamilton, 1756–1816
Author: Claire Grogan
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 218
Release: 2016-04-22
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1317078519

In the first book-length study of the well-respected and popular British writer Elizabeth Hamilton, Claire Grogan addresses a significant gap in scholarship that enlarges and complicates critical understanding of the Romantic woman writer. From 1797 to 1818, Hamilton published in a wide range of genres, including novels, satires, historical and educational treatises, and historical biography. Because she wrote from a politically centrist position during a revolutionary age, Grogan suggests, Hamilton has been neglected in favor of authors who fit within the Jacobin/anti-Jacobin framework used to situate women writers of the period. Grogan draws attention to the inadequacies of the Jacobin/anti-Jacobin binary for understanding writers like Hamilton, arguing that Hamilton and other women writers engaged with and debated the issues of the day in more veiled ways. For example, while Hamilton did not argue for sexual emancipation à la Mary Wollstonecraft and Mary Hays, she asserted her rights in other ways. Hamilton's most radical advance, Grogan shows, was in her deployment of genre, whether she was mixing genres, creating new generic medleys, or assuming competence in a hitherto male-dominated genre. With Hamilton serving as her case study, Grogan persuasively argues for new strategies to uncover the means by which women writers participated in the revolutionary debate.

Anglo-Indian Novel

Anglo-Indian Novel
Author: M. Sarada
Publisher: South Asia Books
Total Pages: 214
Release: 1995
Genre: Anglo-Indian fiction
ISBN:

Sentimental Literature and Anglo-Scottish Identity, 1745–1820

Sentimental Literature and Anglo-Scottish Identity, 1745–1820
Author: Juliet Shields
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages:
Release: 2010-06-24
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1139487973

What did it mean to be British, and more specifically to feel British, in the century following the parliamentary union of Scotland and England? Juliet Shields departs from recent accounts of the Romantic emergence of nationalism by recovering the terms in which eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century writers understood nationhood. She argues that in the wake of the turmoil surrounding the Union, Scottish writers appealed to sentiment, or refined feeling, to imagine the nation as a community. They sought to transform a Great Britain united by political and economic interests into one united by shared sympathies, even while they used the gendered and racial connotations of sentiment to differentiate sharply between Scottish, English, and British identities. By moving Scotland from the margins to the center of literary history, the book explores how sentiment shaped both the development of British identity and the literature within which writers responded creatively to the idea of nationhood.