University Press of America
Pages: 192
Trim: 5¾ x 8¾
978-0-7618-1611-9 • Hardback • March 2000 • $112.00 • (£86.00)
978-0-7618-1612-6 • Paperback • March 2000 • $66.99 • (£52.00)
Laura Dabundo is Professor of English at Kennesaw State University.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Responding to the French Revolution: William's Julia and Burney's The Wanderer
Chapter 3 Having Her Cake and Eating, Too: Ambivalence, Popularity, and the Psychosocial Implications of Ann Radcliffe's Fiction
Chapter 4 The Preceptor as Fiend: Radcliffe's Psychology of the Gothic
Chapter 5 The Treatment of Women in the Novels of Charlotte Turner Smith
Chapter 6 Jane Austen's Opacities
Chapter 7 Susan Ferrier's Allusions: Comedy, Morality, and the Presence of Milton
Chapter 8 The Limits of Liberal Feminism in Maria Edgeworth's Belinda
Chapter 9 A Reading of Maria Edgeworth's Castle Rackrent
Chapter 10 Mary Wollestonecraft and Mary Shelley: Ideological Affinities
Chapter 11 The Alienation of Family in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein
Chapter 12 Mary Shelley, Shakespeare, and the Romantic Theatre
Chapter 13 Mary Shelley and the Romance of Science
Chapter 14 The Uses of Adventure: The Moral and Evangelical Robinsonnades of Agnes Strickland, Barbara Hofland and Ann Fraser Tytler
Chapter 15 Representative Chronology of English Novels by Women of the Romantic Period
Chapter 16 Selected Bibliography
Chapter 17 Index
. . .a helpful chronology of British women's novels of the period. . .
— Choice Reviews
. . .a helpful chronology of British women's novels of the period. . .
— Choice Reviews