Lady Mary Wortley Montagu and the Eighteenth-Century Familiar Letter
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Lady Mary Wortley Montagu and the Eighteenth-Century Familiar Letter

Title Details

Pages: 272

Trim size: 6.000in x 9.000in

Formats

Paperback

Pub Date: 07/01/2010

ISBN: 9-780-8203-3693-0

List Price: $30.95

Lady Mary Wortley Montagu and the Eighteenth-Century Familiar Letter

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  • Description
  • Reviews

This is is the first critical study of one of the most important women writers of the early eighteenth century, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (1689–1762), who produced a body of erudite and entertaining correspondence that spanned more than fifty years. Lady Mary’s letters illuminate the difficulties encountered by a sensitive, intelligent, and gifted woman writer living through an era of significant cultural change. These letters display the tensions inherent in the competing demands of public and private life, revealing Lady Mary’s own discomfort about the problems of authorship and authority in an age that held publication to be an improper activity for respectable women. Through the discourse of supposedly “private” letters, Lady Mary was able to find an avenue for her talents that brought her “public” stature without violating the imperatives of her position as a woman and an aristocrat.

Cynthia Lowenthal argues persuasively that Lady Mary’s letters, themselves central to the establishment of the familiar letter as an important eighteenthcentury genre, were self-consciously constructed as literary artifacts and crafted as part of a larger female epistolary tradition. Moreover, Lowenthal contends, the works of Lady Mary are essential to the feminist recuperation of women’s writing precisely because she provided an aristocratic critique—a voice often ignored—of the class and gender codes of her day.

[A] sensitive, ambitious, and elegantly written monograph.

Studies in English Literature

The book’s tone is poised and reflective, its critical approach tactful and balanced. Primarily a work of synthesis, it lucidly refines our knowledge of Lady Mary’s epistolary achievement.

Review of English Studies

As a critical biography, which is perhaps how it is best approached, Lowenthal’s book makes an interesting contribution to work on Montagu.

—Clara Tuite, AUMLA

About the Author/Editor

CYNTHIA J. LOWENTHAL is dean of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at the College of Charleston. She is the author of Performing Identities on the Restoration Stage.