The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

Revolutionary Women Writers: Charlotte Smith and Helen Maria Williams
Revolutionary Women Writers: Charlotte Smith and Helen Maria Williams

Revolutionary Women Writers: Charlotte Smith and Helen Maria Williams in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $32.95
Loading Inventory...
Get it at Barnes and Noble

Size: OS

Get it at Barnes and Noble
In the 1790s, when Charlotte Smith and Helen Maria Williams were at the peak of their critical reputations, they were known to each other and often cited together approvingly. It was Smith who provided the young William Wordsworth with a letter of introduction to Williams when he visited France in 1791 (though she had left by the time he got there). By the end of the decade Smith and Williams were being cited together more pejoratively, as two of a number of women who came to stand for the amoral, sexually suspect and politically naïve English 'Jacobins' who were vilified in the conservative press. Neither were in fact 'Jacobins' but they were revolutionary. This book looks at how Smith and Williams earned such reputations and at the politics and poetics of the works that reveal Smith to be a self-constructed Romantic and Williams as a mistress of intimate disguise.
Powered by Adeptmind