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      Vocational Philanthropy and British Women’s Writing, 1790–1810
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      Book

      Vocational Philanthropy and British Women’s Writing, 1790–1810

      DOI link for Vocational Philanthropy and British Women’s Writing, 1790–1810

      Vocational Philanthropy and British Women’s Writing, 1790–1810 book

      Wollstonecraft, More, Edgeworth, Wordsworth

      Vocational Philanthropy and British Women’s Writing, 1790–1810

      DOI link for Vocational Philanthropy and British Women’s Writing, 1790–1810

      Vocational Philanthropy and British Women’s Writing, 1790–1810 book

      Wollstonecraft, More, Edgeworth, Wordsworth
      ByComitini Patricia
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2005
      eBook Published 12 April 2017
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315317748
      Pages 176
      eBook ISBN 9781315317748
      Subjects Humanities, Language & Literature
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      Patricia, C. (2005). Vocational Philanthropy and British Women’s Writing, 1790–1810: Wollstonecraft, More, Edgeworth, Wordsworth (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315317748

      ABSTRACT

      Patricia Comitini's study compels serious rethinking of how literature by women in the late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth centuries should be read. Beginning with a description of the ways in which evolving conceptions of philanthropy were foundational to constructions of class and gender roles, Comitini argues that these changes enabled a particular kind of feminine benevolence that was linked to women's work as writers. The term 'vocational philanthropy' is suggestive of the ways that women used their status as professional writers to instruct men and women in changing gender relations, and to educate the middling and laboring classes in their new roles during a socially and economically turbulent era. Examining works by Hannah More, Mary Wollstonecraft, Maria Edgeworth, and Dorothy Wordsworth, whose writing crosses generic, political, and social boundaries, Comitini shows how women from diverse backgrounds shared a commitment to philanthropy - fostering the love of mankind - and an interest in the social nature of literacy. Their writing fosters sentiments that they hoped would be shared between the sexes and among the classes in English society, forging new reading audiences among women and the lower classes. These writers and their writing exemplify the paradigm of vocational philanthropy, which gives people not money, but texts to read, in order to imagine societal improvement. The effect was to permit the emergence of middle-class values linking private notions of morality, family, and love to the public needs for good citizens, industrious laborers, and class consolidation.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |15 pages

      Introduction

      chapter 1|23 pages

      History, Philanthropy and Benevolent Femininity

      chapter 2|25 pages

      The Benevolent Woman: Rereading Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Woman

      chapter 3|41 pages

      Beyond the Polite: Philanthropy and the Politics of ‘Popular’ Tales

      chapter 4|22 pages

      Reforming Fiction and the Middling Classes: Maria Edgeworth’s Belinda

      chapter 5|22 pages

      ‘More Than Half a Poet’: Dorothy Wordsworth’s Grasmere Journal

      chapter |3 pages

      Conclusion

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