Memoirs of Emma Courtney

In November of 1795, after William Godwin requested a sketch of Mary Hays’ life, she arrived at the idea of Memoirs of Emma Courtney. Godwin followed up his request with a “hint” that a fictional exploration of the painful experience she had undergone in her relationship with William Frend might help her to come to terms with it. It was to be an “instructive rather than self indulgent” work. The resulting novel is one of the most interesting and important explorations of gender-related issues of the time. Emma is exposed to a series of situations—motherlessness, orphanhood, poverty, dependence, and more—which encourage her to reflect “on the inequalities of society, the source of every misery and vice, and on the peculiar disadvanteges of my sex.” The novel quickly became viewed as “a scandalous disrobing in public” but it has endured as much on the basis of its readability as on its pointed social commentary.

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Memoirs of Emma Courtney

In November of 1795, after William Godwin requested a sketch of Mary Hays’ life, she arrived at the idea of Memoirs of Emma Courtney. Godwin followed up his request with a “hint” that a fictional exploration of the painful experience she had undergone in her relationship with William Frend might help her to come to terms with it. It was to be an “instructive rather than self indulgent” work. The resulting novel is one of the most interesting and important explorations of gender-related issues of the time. Emma is exposed to a series of situations—motherlessness, orphanhood, poverty, dependence, and more—which encourage her to reflect “on the inequalities of society, the source of every misery and vice, and on the peculiar disadvanteges of my sex.” The novel quickly became viewed as “a scandalous disrobing in public” but it has endured as much on the basis of its readability as on its pointed social commentary.

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Memoirs of Emma Courtney

Memoirs of Emma Courtney

Memoirs of Emma Courtney

Memoirs of Emma Courtney

Paperback(New Edition)

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Overview

In November of 1795, after William Godwin requested a sketch of Mary Hays’ life, she arrived at the idea of Memoirs of Emma Courtney. Godwin followed up his request with a “hint” that a fictional exploration of the painful experience she had undergone in her relationship with William Frend might help her to come to terms with it. It was to be an “instructive rather than self indulgent” work. The resulting novel is one of the most interesting and important explorations of gender-related issues of the time. Emma is exposed to a series of situations—motherlessness, orphanhood, poverty, dependence, and more—which encourage her to reflect “on the inequalities of society, the source of every misery and vice, and on the peculiar disadvanteges of my sex.” The novel quickly became viewed as “a scandalous disrobing in public” but it has endured as much on the basis of its readability as on its pointed social commentary.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781551111551
Publisher: Broadview Press
Publication date: 01/25/2000
Series: Literary Texts Series
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 340
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.69(d)

About the Author

Marilyn Brooks teaches in the Literature Department of The Open University, East Anglian Region.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Introduction
Mary Hays: A Brief Chronology
A Note on the Text

Memoirs of Emma Courtney

Appendix A: Selections from the Mary Hays and William Godwin Correspondence

Appendix B: Selected Letters of William Frend

Appendix C: Articles by Hays in the Monthly Magazine

Appendix D: Reviews of Memoirs of Emma Courtney

Appendix E:

  1. On Sensibility
  2. On Melancholy

Appendix F: The Anti-Jacobin Backlash

Appendix G: Mary Wollstonecraft to Mary Hays

Appendix H: Obituary of Mary Wollstonecraft

Select Bibliography

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