Description
Book SynopsisImagining women readers reassesses the cultural significance of women''s reading in the period 1789-1820. While much attention has been paid to the moral panic provoked by novel-reading during this period, this study offers a more progressive and enabling narrative. From the turbulent years following the French Revolution to the fiction of Jane Austen, Imagining women readers charts the rise of a self-regulating reader, who possesses both moral and cultural authority. De Ritter identifies how writers working in a range of genres - including conduct books, educational texts, and fiction - viewed reading as a mode of symbolic labour, which enabled forms of female participation in national life. Often considered an inward-looking, domestic activity, this book argues that reading was frequently depicted through the language of the public, rather than the private, sphere. Over the course of its five chapters, Imagining women readers offers a unique perspective on the relationship between re
Trade Review‘Imagining Women Readers provides a comprehensive look at the eighteenth-century economies of representation that informed the establishment both of gendered reading curricula and of the kinds of reading activities identified with acceptable forms of female domestic labor and pleasure. De Ritter’s study will be of interest to scholars working with archival material on the history of reading as a symbolic and physical or material activity, as well as those interested in the specific writers whom he references (including Wollstonecraft, More, Hays, Edgeworth, and Godwin).’
Erin L. Webster-Garrett, Radford University, European Romantic Review
‘Richard De Ritter reminds us of the great resistance to novel-reading that accompanied the expanding popularity of the genre in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries….This is an informative volume that includes a wealth of references about the dangers and challenges of reading.’
George E. Haggerty, The University of California, SEL Studies in English Literature 1500-1900, Vol. 57, No. 3, Summer 2017
‘Richard De Ritter’s Imagining Women Readers, 1789–1820: Well- Regulated Minds usefully tracks how assumptions about female reading practices changed over this period.’
Talia Schaffer, SEL, Studies in English Literature, Vol. 57, No.4, Autumn 2017
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Table of ContentsIntroduction
1. ‘Like a sheet of white paper’: books, bodies, and the sensuous materials of the mind
2. ‘Wholesome labour’: the work of reading
3. ‘The enlightened energy of parental affection’: post-revolutionary schemes of education
4. ‘Leisure to be wise’: female education and the possibilities of domesticity
5. Making the novel-readers of a country: pleasure and the practised reader
Bibliography
Index