ABSTRACT

Until now, the missionary plot in Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre has been seen as marginal and anomalous. Despite women missionaries being ubiquitous in the nineteenth century, they appeared to be absent from nineteenth-century literature. As this book demonstrates, though, the female missionary character and narrative was, in fact, present in a range of writings from missionary newsletters and life writing, to canonical Victorian literature, New Woman fiction and women’s college writing. Nineteenth-century women writers wove the tropes of the female missionary figure and plot into their domestic fiction, and the female missionary themes of religious self-sacrifice and heroism formed the subjectivity of these writers and their characters. Offering an alternative narrative for the development of women writers and early feminism, as well as a new reading of Jane Eyre, this book adds to the debate about whether religious women in the nineteenth century could actually be radical and feminist.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

chapter |24 pages

Prologue

Ann Judson and Harriet Newell: Immortalising the Female Missionary

part |98 pages

Part I

chapter 1|35 pages

Tales of Female Missionary Sacrifice

Tracts, Collective Biographies and Newsletters

chapter 2|26 pages

Missionary Self-Sacrifice in the Domestic Sphere

The Tracts and Novels of Martha Sherwood, Hesba Stretton and Dinah Craik

chapter 3|35 pages

Novel Approaches to Missionary Sacrifice

Charlotte Brontë and Elizabeth Gaskell

part |84 pages

Part II

chapter 4|41 pages

Missionaries of the New

Sarah Grand, Olive Schreiner and Margaret Harkness

chapter 5|41 pages

Women, Religion and Power

University Women's Missionary Writing

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion