The Muses of Resistance
Laboring-Class Women's Poetry in Britain, 1739–1796
£90.00
- Author: Donna Landry
- Date Published: November 1990
- availability: Available
- format: Hardback
- isbn: 9780521374125
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In this challenging 1990 study, Donna Landry shows how an understanding of the remarkable but neglected careers of laboring-class women poets in the eighteenth century provokes a reassessment of our ideas concerning the literature of the period. Poets such as the washerwoman Mary Collier, the milkwoman Ann Yearsley, the domestic servants Mary Leapor and Elizabeth Hands, the dairywoman Janet Little, and the slave Phyllis Wheatley can be seen adapting the conventions of polite verse for the purposes of social criticism. Some of their strategies relate to earlier texts, revealing ideological blind spots in the tropes of male poets. Elsewhere, they made interesting innovations in poetic form. Mary Leapor's 'Crumble Hall', for instance, by attending to sexual politics, extends the critique of aristocratic privilege in the country-house poem beyond that of Pope and Crabbe. In Ann Yearsley's verse, landscape description, historical narrative, and philosophical meditation are infused with political comment. Historically important, technically impressive and often aesthetically innovative, the poetic achievements of these plebeian women writers constitute an exciting literary discovery.
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×Product details
- Date Published: November 1990
- format: Hardback
- isbn: 9780521374125
- length: 336 pages
- dimensions: 244 x 170 x 19 mm
- weight: 0.74kg
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Preface
1. Sensibility and slavery: the discourse of working women's verse
2. The resignation of Mary Collier: some problems in feminist literary history
3. An English Sappho brilliant, young and dead? Mary Leapor laughs at the fathers
4. The complex contradictions of Ann Yearsley: working-class writer, bourgeois subject?
5. Laboring in pastures new: the two Elizabeths
6. Other others: the marginality of cultural difference
7. The 1790s and after: 'Revolutions that as yet have no model'.
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