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"Mary Robinson, fantastic beauty, popular actress, and once lover of the Prince of Wales, received the epithet 'the English Sappho' for her lyric verse. Amelia Opie, a member of the fashionable literary society and later a Quaker, included among her friends Sydney Smith, Byron, and Scott, and reputedly refused Godwin's marriage proposal out of admiration for Mary Wollstonecraft. Jane West, who tended her household and dairy while writing prolifically to support her children, was in direct opposition to the radically feminist ideas preceding her. These authors, each from different ideological and social backgrounds, all grappled with a desire for empowerment. Writing in an atmosphere hardened towards reform in response to the French revolution's upheavals, these women focus their narratives on typically feminine attributes - docility, maternal feeling, heightened sensibility (that key word of the period). That focus invests these attributes with new meaning, making supposed female weaknesses potentially active forces for social change."--Jacket.
English fiction --- Women and literature --- Women authors --- History and criticism. --- History --- Opie, Amelia, --- West, --- Robinson, Mary, --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Perdita, --- Robinson, Perdita, --- Robinson, --- Friend to humanity, --- Laura Maria, --- Robinson, M. --- Juvenal, Horace, --- Randall, Anne Frances, --- Bramble, Tabitha, --- Robbinson, --- Iliffe, Jane, --- Advantages of education, Author of, --- Author of A gossip's story, --- Author of A tale of the times, --- Author of Advantages of education, --- Author of Letters to a young man, --- Author of Ned Evans, --- Author of The loyalists, --- Gossip's story, Author of a, --- Letters to a young man, Author of, --- Loyalists, Author of the, --- Ned Evans, Author of, --- Tale of the times, Author of a, --- Wrest, --- Homespun, Prudentia, --- Opie, Amelia Alderson, --- Opie, --- Alderson, Amelia, --- Englisch.
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