fbpx
Wikipedia

Maria Edgeworth

Maria Edgeworth (1 January 1768 – 22 May 1849) was a prolific Anglo-Irish novelist of adults' and children's literature. She was one of the first realist writers in children's literature and was a significant figure in the evolution of the novel in Europe.[2] She held critical views on estate management, politics and education, and corresponded with some of the leading literary and economic writers, including Sir Walter Scott and David Ricardo. During the first decade of the 19th century she was one of the most widely read novelists in Britain and Ireland. Her name today most commonly associated with Castle Rackrent, her first novel in which she adopted an Irish Catholic voice to narrate the dissipation and decline of a family from her own landed Anglo-Irish class.

Maria Edgeworth
Maria Edgeworth by John Downman, 1807
Born(1768-01-01)1 January 1768
Black Bourton, Oxfordshire, England
Died22 May 1849(1849-05-22) (aged 81)
Edgeworthstown, County Longford, Ireland
OccupationWriter (novelist)
NationalityBritish, Irish
Period18th century
GenreRegionalism, Romantic novel, children's literature
Relatives
Signature

Life edit

Early life edit

Maria Edgeworth was born at Black Bourton, Oxfordshire. She was the second child of Richard Lovell Edgeworth (who eventually fathered twenty-two surviving children by four wives) and Anna Maria Edgeworth (née Elers); Maria was thus an aunt of Francis Ysidro Edgeworth.[3] She spent her early years with her mother's family in England, living at The Limes (now known as Edgeworth House) in Northchurch, by Berkhamsted in Hertfordshire.[4][5] Her mother died when Maria was five, and when her father married his second wife Honora Sneyd in 1773, she went with him to his estate, Edgeworthstown, in County Longford, Ireland.[citation needed]

 
Edgeworthstown House, Ireland

Maria was sent to Mrs. Lattafière's school in Derby after Honora fell ill in 1775. After Honora died in 1780 Maria's father married Honora's sister Elizabeth (then socially disapproved and legally forbidden from 1833 until the Deceased Wife's Sister's Marriage Act 1907). Maria transferred to Mrs. Devis's school in London. Her father's attention became fully focused on her in 1781 when she nearly lost her sight to an eye infection.[1] Returning home at the age of 14, she took charge of her many younger siblings[6] and was home-tutored in law, Irish economics and politics, science, and literature by her father. She also started her lifelong correspondences with learned men, mainly members of the Lunar Society.[citation needed]

She became her father's assistant in managing the Edgeworthstown estate, which had become run-down during the family's 1777–1782 absence; she would live and write there for the rest of her life. With their bond strengthened, Maria and her father began a lifelong academic collaboration "of which she was the more able and nimble mind".[1] Present at Edgeworthstown was an extended family, servants and tenants. She observed and recorded the details of daily Irish life, later drawing on this experience for her novels about the Irish. She also mixed with the Anglo-Irish gentry, particularly Kitty Pakenham (later the wife of Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington), Lady Moira, and her aunt Margaret Ruxton of Blackcastle.[7] Margaret supplied her with the novels of Ann Radcliffe and William Godwin and encouraged her in her writing.[8]

Travels edit

In 1798 Richard married Frances Beaufort, daughter of Daniel Augustus Beaufort, who instigated the idea of travelling to England and the European continent. Frances, a year younger than Maria, became her lifelong confidante. The family travelled first to London in 1800.[citation needed]

In 1802 the Edgeworths toured the English midlands. They then travelled to the continent, first to Brussels and then to Consulate France (during the Peace of Amiens, a brief lull in the Napoleonic Wars). They met all the notables, and Maria received a marriage proposal from a Swedish courtier, Count Edelcrantz. Her letter on the subject seems very cool, but her stepmother assures us in the Augustus Hare Life and Letters that Maria loved him very much and did not get over the affair quickly. They came home to Ireland in 1803 on the eve of the resumption of the wars and Maria returned to writing. Tales of Fashionable Life, The Absentee and Ormond are novels of Irish life.[8] Edgeworth was an extremely popular author who was compared with her contemporary writers Jane Austen and Sir Walter Scott. She initially earned more than them, and used her income to help her siblings.[9]

On a visit to London in 1813, where she was received as a literary lion, Maria met Lord Byron (whom she disliked) and Humphry Davy. She entered into a long correspondence with the ultra-Tory Sir Walter Scott after the publication of Waverley in 1814, in which he gratefully acknowledged her influence, and they formed a lasting friendship. She visited him in Scotland at Abbotsford House in 1823, where he took her on a tour of the area.[8] The next year, Sir Walter visited Edgeworthstown. When passing through the village, one of the party wrote, "We found neither mud hovels nor naked peasantry, but snug cottages and smiles all about".[10] A counter view was provided by another visitor who stated that the residents of Edgeworthstown treated Edgeworth with contempt, refusing even to feign politeness.[11]

Later life edit

 
Maria Edgeworth, c. 1841

Richard Edgeworth was comparatively fair and forgiving in his dealings with his tenants and was actively involved in the estate's management. After debating the issue with the economist David Ricardo, Maria came to believe that better management and the further application of science to agriculture would raise food production and lower prices.[12] Both Richard and Maria were also in favour of Catholic Emancipation, enfranchisement for Catholics without property restrictions (although he admitted it was against his own interest), agricultural reform and increased educational opportunities for women.[13][14] She particularly worked hard to improve the living standards of the poor in Edgeworthstown. In trying to improve conditions in the village she provided schools for the local children of all denominations.[15]

After her father's death in 1817 she edited his memoirs, and extended them with her biographical comments. She was an active writer to the last.[citation needed]

She worked for the relief of the famine-stricken Irish peasants during the Great Famine. She wrote Orlandino for the benefit of the Relieve Fund.[16] Her letters to the Quaker Relief Committee provide a vivid account of the desperate plight facing the tenants in Edgeworthstown, the extreme conditions under which they lived, and the struggle to obtain whatever aid and assistance she could to alleviate their plight.[17][18] Through her efforts she received gifts for the poor from America.[16]

During the Irish Famine Edgeworth insisted that only those of her tenants who had paid their rent in full would receive relief. Edgeworth also punished those of her tenants who voted against her Tory preferences.[11]

With the election of William Rowan Hamilton to president of the Royal Irish Academy, Maria became a dominant source of advice for Hamilton, particularly on the issue of literature in Ireland. She suggested that women should be allowed to participate in events held by the academy. For her guidance and help, Hamilton made Edgeworth an honorary member of the Royal Irish Academy in 1837, following in the footsteps of Louisa Beaufort, a former member of the academy and a relative of hers.[1]

After a visit to see her relations in Trim, Maria, now in her eighties, began to feel heart pains and died suddenly of a heart attack in Edgeworthstown on 22 May 1849.[1]

Views edit

 
Miniature of Edgeworth by Adam Buck, c. 1790

Though Maria Edgeworth spent most of her childhood in England, her life in Ireland had a profound impact on both her thinking and views surrounding her Irish culture. Fauske and Kaufman conclude, "[She] used her fiction to address the inherent problems of acts delineated by religious, national, racial, class based, sexual, and gendered identities".[19] Edgeworth used works such Castle Rackrent and Harrington to express her feelings on controversial issues.[citation needed]

Ireland edit

In her works, Edgeworth created a nostalgic past of Ireland in an attempt to celebrate Irish culture. Suvendrini Perera said Edgeworth's novels traced "the gradual anglicanization of feudal Irish society". Edgeworth's goal in her works was to show the Irish as equal to the English, and therefore warranting equal, though not separate, status. Essay on Irish Bulls rejects an English stereotype of Irishmen and portrays them accurately in realistic, everyday settings.[20] This is a common theme in her Irish works, combating the caricatured Irish with accurate representations.[21] In her work Edgeworth also places focus on the linguistic differences between Irish and English societies, as a foil to how dynamic and intricate Irish society was in spite of English stereotypes.[22] Novelist Seamus Deane connected Edgeworth's depiction of Ireland and its relationship to England as being in line with wider Enlightenment ideals, noting that Edgeworth "was not the first novelist to have chosen Ireland as her ‘scene’; but she was the first to realize that there was, within it, a missionary opportunity to convert it to Enlightenment faith and rescue it from its ‘romantic’ conditions".[23]

Edgeworth's writing of Ireland, especially her early Irish tales, offer an important rearticulation of Burkean local attachment and philosophical cosmopolitanism to produce an understanding of the nation as neither tightly bordered (like nations based on historical premises such as blood or inheritance) or not borderless (like those based on rational notions of universal inclusion).[24] Edgeworth used her writing to reconsider the meaning of the denomination "Anglo-Irish", and through her interrogation she reinterpreted both cosmopolitan and national definitions of belonging so as to reconstitute "Anglo-Irish" less as a category than as an ongoing mediation between borders.[24] In Edgeworth's Irish novels, education is the key to both individual and national improvement, according to Edgeworth, "it is the foundation of the well-governed estate and the foundation of the well-governed nation".[24] More specifically, a slow process of education instils transnational understanding in the Irish people while retaining the bonds of local attachment by which the nation is secured.[24] The centrality of education not only suggests Edgeworth's wish for a rooted yet cosmopolitan or transnational judgment, but also distinguishes her writing from constructions of national identity as national character, linking her through to earlier cosmopolitan constructions of universal human subjects.[24] By claiming national difference as anchored in education, culture rather than nature, Edgeworth gives to national identity a sociocultural foundation, and thereby opens a space in which change can happen.[24]

Social edit

Maria agreed with the Act of Union, but thought that it should not be passed against the wishes of the Irish people. Concerning education, she thought boys and girls should be educated equally and together, drawing upon Rousseau's ideas.[25] She believed a woman should only marry someone who suits her in "character, temper, and understanding".[26] Becoming an old maid was preferable to an incompatible union. The story "Vivian" from Tales of Fashionable Life and Patronage attack eighteenth-century English Whig governance of Ireland as corrupt and unrepresentative.[27] Edgeworth strove for the self-realization of women and stressed the importance of the individual. She also wanted greater participation in politics by middle-class women. Her work Helen clearly demonstrates this point in the passage: "Women are now so highly cultivated, and political subjects are at present of so much importance, of such high interest, to all human creatures who live together in society, you can hardly expect, Helen, that you, as a rational being, can go through the world as it now is, without forming any opinion on points of public importance. You cannot, I conceive, satisfy yourself with the common namby-pamby little missy phrase, 'ladies have nothing to do with politics'".[28] She sympathised with Catholics and supported gradual, though not immediate, Catholic Emancipation.[29]

Education edit

 
First edition title page to Practical Education, 1798

In her 1798 book Practical Education,[30] she advanced a scientific approach to education, acknowledging the difficulty of doing such research which was "patiently reduced to an experimental science". She claimed no adherence to a school of thought, no new theory and purposefully avoided religion and politics. In the book's 25 chapters, she presages modern improvements to age-related educational materials, for example: in geography, maps bordered with suitable illustrated biographies; in chronology, something "besides merely committing names and dates to memory"; in chemistry, safe chemical experiments that children might undertake. She maintained that unnecessarily causing fatigue should be a great concern of educators.[31] To help illustrate the care that must be taken in teaching children and to emphasise the necessity of properly directing and managing their attentiveness, Maria Edgeworth drew several comparisons with non-European peoples.[31] In making the point that any mode of instruction that tired the attention was hurtful to children, her reasoning was that people can pay attention only to one thing at a time, and because children can appear resistant to repetition, teachers naturally should vary things.[31] However, educators should always be mindful of the fact that, "while variety relieves the mind, the objects which are varied must not all be entirely new, for novelty and variety when joined, fatigue the mind" as Edgeworth states.[31] The teaching of children needed to follow carefully considered methods, needed to evidence concern for appropriateness and proper sequencing, and needed to be guided by consideration from forms of teaching that would be empowering and enabling, not fatiguing or disabling.[31] In Edgeworth's work, the attention of the child appears as a key site for pedagogical work and interventions.[31]

Work edit

 
Library at Edgeworthstown House 1888

Edgeworth's early literary efforts have often been considered melodramatic rather than realistic. Recent scholarship,[32] however, has uncovered the importance of Edgeworth's previously unpublished juvenilia manuscript, The Double Disguise (1786).[33] In particular, The Double Disguise signals Edgeworth's turn toward realism and is now considered a seminal regional narrative predating Castle Rackrent (1800). In addition, Edgeworth wrote many children's novels that conveyed moral lessons to their audience (often in partnership with her friend Louise Swanton Belloc, a French writer, translator, and advocate for the education of women and children, whose many translations of Edgeworth's works were largely responsible for her popularity in France).[34][35][36][37] One of her schoolgirl novels features a villain who wore a mask made from the skin of a dead man's face. Edgeworth's first published work was Letters for Literary Ladies in 1795. This work was a response to Thomas Day's, a member of the Lunar Society, belief that women should not be authors or taught to think.[38] Her work, "An Essay on the Noble Science of Self-Justification" (1795) is written for a female audience in which she convinces women that the fair sex is endowed with an art of self-justification and women should use their gifts to continually challenge the force and power of men, especially their husbands, with wit and intelligence. It humorously and satirically explores the feminine argumentative method.[9] This was followed in 1796 by her first children's book, The Parent's Assistant, which included Edgeworth's celebrated short story "The Purple Jar". The Parent's Assistant was influenced by her father's work and perspectives on children's education.[6]

Mr. Edgeworth, a well-known author and inventor, encouraged his daughter's career. At the height of her creative endeavours, Maria wrote, "Seriously it was to please my Father I first exerted myself to write, to please him I continued".[39] Though the impetus for Maria's works, Mr. Edgeworth has been criticised for his insistence on approving and editing her work. The tales in The Parent's Assistant were approved by her father before he would allow them to be read to her younger siblings. It is speculated that her stepmother and siblings also helped in the editing process of Edgeworth's work.[40]

Practical Education (1798)[notes 1] is a progressive work on education that combines the ideas of Locke and Rousseau with scientific inquiry. Edgeworth asserts that "learning should be a positive experience and that the discipline of education is more important during the formative years than the acquisition of knowledge".[41] The system attempted to "adapt both the curriculum and methods of teaching to the needs of the child; the endeavour to explain moral habits and the learning process through associationism; and most important, the effort to entrust the child with the responsibility for his own mental culture".[42] The ultimate goal of Edgeworth's system was to create an independent thinker who understands the consequences of his or her actions.[citation needed]

Her first novel, Castle Rackrent (1800) was written and submitted for anonymous publication in 1800 without her father's knowledge. It was an immediate success and firmly established Edgeworth's appeal.[8] The book is a satire on Anglo-Irish landlords, before the year 1782, showing the need for more responsible management by the Irish landowning class. The story follows four generations of an Irish landholding family, the Rackrents. It is narrated by an Irish catholic worker on the estate, named Thady Quirk, and portrayed the rise of the catholic-Irish middle class.[43]

Belinda (1801), a 3-volume work published in London, was Maria Edgeworth's first full-length novel. It dealt with love, courtship, and marriage, dramatising the conflicts within her "own personality and environment; conflicts between reason and feeling, restraint and individual freedom, and society and free spirit".[44] Belinda was also notable for its controversial depiction of interracial marriage between a Black servant and an English farmgirl. Later editions of the novel, however, removed these sections.[notes 2]

Tales of Fashionable Life (1809 and 1812) is a 2-series collection of short stories which often focus on the life of a woman.[1] The second series was particularly well received in England, making her the most commercially successful novelist of her age. After this, Edgeworth was regarded as the preeminent female writer in England alongside Jane Austen.[1]

Following an anti-Semitic remark in The Absentee, Edgeworth received a letter from an American Jewish woman named Rachel Mordecai in 1815 complaining about Edgeworth's depiction of Jews.[45] In response, Harrington (1817) was written as an apology to the Jewish community. The novel was a fictitious autobiography about overcoming antisemitism and includes one of the first sympathetic Jewish characters in an English novel.[46]

Helen (1834) is Maria Edgeworth's final novel, the only one she wrote after her father's death. She chose to write a novel focused on the characters and situation, rather than moral lessons.[1] In a letter to her publisher, Maria wrote, "I have been reproached for making my moral in some stories too prominent. I am sensible of the inconvenience of this both to reader and writer & have taken much pains to avoid it in Helen".[1] Her novel is also set in England, a conscious choice as Edgeworth found Ireland too troubling for a fictitious work in the political climate of the 1830s.[1]

Style and purpose edit

 
Maria Edgeworth

Having come to her literary maturity at a time when the ubiquitous and unvarying stated defence of the novel was its educative power, Maria Edgeworth was among the few authors who truly espoused the educator's role.[47] Her novels are morally and socially didactic in the extreme. A close analysis of the alterations which Edgeworth's style underwent when it was pressed into the service of overt didacticism should serve to illuminate the relationship between prose technique and didactic purpose in her work.[47] The convention which Maria Edgeworth has adopted and worked to death is basic to the eighteenth-century novel, but its roots lie in the drama, tracing at least to the Renaissance separation of high and low characters by their forms of speech.[47] Throughout the eighteenth-century drama, and most noticeably in the sentimental comedy, the separation becomes more and more a means of moral judgment as well as social identification.[47] The only coherent reason for Edgeworth's acceptance is the appeal of didactic moralism. In the first place, she is willing to suspend judgment wherever the service of the moral is the result.[47] Everything else may go, so long as the lesson is enforced. the lesson might be a warning against moral impropriety, as in Miss Milner's story, or against social injustice, as in The Absentee.[47] Furthermore, the whole reliance on positive exemplars had been justified long before by Richard Steele, who argued that the stage must supply perfect heroes since its examples are imitated and since simple natures are incapable of making the necessary deductions from the negative exemplars of satire.[47]

The characteristic of Edgeworth is to connect an identifiable strain of formal realism, both philosophical and rhetorical, and therefore display an objective interest in human nature and the way it manifests itself in social custom.[48] One would expect this from Edgeworth, an author whose didacticism often has struck modern readers as either gendered liability, technical regression, or familial obligation.[48] Critics have responded to Edgeworth's eccentricities by attributing them to something more deep-seated, temperamental, and psychological.[48] In their various, often insightful representation, Edgeworth's fondness for the real, the strange, and the pedagogically useful verges on the relentless, the obsessive, and the instinctive.[48] There is an alternative literary answer to explain Edgeworth's cultural roots and ideological aims which shifts focus away from Edgeworth's familial, psychological, and cultural predicaments to the formal paradigms by which her work has been judged.[48] Rather than locating Edgeworth's early romances of real life exclusively within the traditions of eighteenth-century children's literature or domestic realism, they can be read primarily as responses to late eighteenth-century debates over the relation between history and romance, because the genre attempts to mediate between the two differentiating itself from other kinds of factual fiction.[48] Edgeworth's romances of real life operate in the same discursive field but do not attempt to traverse between self-denied antinomies.[48] In fact, they usually make the opposite claim.[citation needed]

Edgeworth's repeated self-effacement needs to be seen in the context of the times, where learning in women was often disapproved of and even ridiculed, such as the satirical poem of the Rev. Richard Polwhele, The Unsex'd Females (1798).[49]

List of published works edit

A partial list of published works:[50]

  • Letters for Literary Ladies – 1795; Second Edition – 1798
    • includes: An Essay on the Noble Science of Self-Justification – 1795
  • The Parent's Assistant – 1796
  • Practical Education – 1798 (2 vols; collaborated with her father, Richard Lovell Edgeworth and step-mother, Honora Sneyd)
  • Castle Rackrent – 1800 (novel)
  • Edgeworth, Maria (1801). Early Lessons (1st ed.). London: Johnson.
  • Moral Tales – 1801
  • Belinda – 1801 (novel)
  • The Mental Thermometer – 1801
  • Essay on Irish Bulls – 1802 (political, collaborated with her father)
  • Popular Tales – 1804
  • The Modern Griselda – 1804
  • Moral Tales for Young People – 1805 (6 vols)
  • Leonora – 1806 (written during the French excursion)
  • Essays in Professional Education – 1809
  • Tales of Fashionable Life – 1809 and 1812 (2 collections of stories, the second of which includes The Absentee)
  • Ennui – 1809 (novel)
  • The Absentee – 1812 (novel)
  • Patronage – 1814 (novel)
  • Harrington – 1817 (novel)
  • Ormond – 1817 (novel)
  • Comic Dramas – 1817
  • Memoirs of Richard Lovell Edgeworth – 1820 (edited her father's memoirs)
  • Rosamond: A Sequel to Early Lessons – 1821
  • Frank: A Sequel to Frank in Early Lessons – 1822
  • Tomorrow – 1823 (novel)
  • Helen – 1834 (novel)
  • Orlandino – 1848 (temperance novel)

Also:

  • Edgeworth, Maria (1820). "RL Edgeworth Esq". The Annual Register. Part II: 1215–1223.
  • Edgeworth, Maria (2013). Complete Novels of Maria Edgeworth (Illustrated). Delphi Classics.
  • Hall, S. C. (1849). "Edgeworthstown: Memories of Maria Edgeworth". Living Age. 22: 320–329. Retrieved 30 March 2015.

Legacy edit

During the period 1800–1814 (when Walter Scott's Waverley was published) Edgeworth was the most celebrated and successful living English novelist. Her reputation equalled that of Fanny Burney (Madame d'Arblay) (1752–1840) earlier, in a time that saw a number of other female writers including Elizabeth Hamilton, Amelia Opie, Hannah More and Elizabeth Inchbald. Her only potential male competitor prior to Scott was William Godwin. She was certainly well received by the critics and literary figures of her time. Croker (1780–1857) compared her work to Don Quixote and Gil Blas and to the work of Henry Fielding, while Francis Jeffrey (1773–1850) called her work 'perfect'.[51]

The Ulster Gaelic Society, established in 1830, succeeded in a single publication in its history, namely the translation into Irish of two stories by Maria Edgeworth:[52] Tomás Ó Fiannachtaigh translated Forgive and Forget and Rosanna into Irish in the 1830s.[53]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Ostensibly a collaborative project between father and daughter, but in reality a family project (Nash 2006, p. 59).
  2. ^ See Introduction to World Classics edition of Belinda, page xxvii, written by Kathryn Kirkpatrick: "In the 1810 edition of her novel Edgeworth effectively rewrote her representation of romantic relationships between English women and West Indian men, both Creole and African. She felt her novel so changed, she described it to her aunt as 'a twice told tale'. And that she retold her story to omit even the possibility of unions between English women and West Indian men is significant. For it suggests that in order for Belinda to merit inclusion in a series defining the British novel, Edgeworth had to make her colonial characters less visible, less integrated socially into English society. And she certainly had to banish the spectre of inter-racial marriage". Edgeworth herself said she removed the Juba-Lucy interracial marriage "because my father has great delicacies and scruples of conscience about encouraging such marriage".

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j McCormack 2015.
  2. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica 2014.
  3. ^ Keown, Edwina (1 February 2011), Quinn, James (ed.), "Edgeworth, Maria", Dictionary of Irish Biography, Royal Irish Academy, doi:10.3318/dib.002882.v2, retrieved 25 May 2023
  4. ^ Historic England, "Edgeworth House (1342141)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 11 June 2021
  5. ^ Wreyford, Paul (2008). Literary Buckinghamshire. History Press. ISBN 978-0-7509-5342-9. Retrieved 11 June 2021.
  6. ^ a b Jane Donawerth (2002). Rhetorical Theory By Women Before 1900. Lanham, MD: Rowman & LittleField. pp. 130–131. ISBN 0-7425-1717-9.
  7. ^ "Blackcastle House". Navan & District Historical Society. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
  8. ^ a b c d Henry Boylan (1998). A Dictionary of Irish Biography, 3rd Edition. Dublin: Gill and MacMillan. p. 120. ISBN 0-7171-2945-4.
  9. ^ a b Jane Donawerth (2002). Rhetorical Theory By Women Before 1900. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.
  10. ^ "Maria Edgeworth". The Irish Times. 12 September 1903.
  11. ^ a b Michael Hurst (1969) Maria Edgeworth and the Public Scene. Fla.: Coral. p. 94.
  12. ^ Kern, William. . Publications. American Economic Association: Committee on the Status of Women in the Economics Profession. Archived from the original on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 1 October 2011.
  13. ^ Butler 1972, p. 112.
  14. ^ Sharon Murphy (2004). Maria Edgeworth and Romance. Dublin: Four Courts Press. ISBN 1-85182-852-4.
  15. ^ Lord Longford (23 May 1949). "Memorial Service, Maria Edgeworth". The Irish Times. p. 5.
  16. ^ a b "Maria Edgeworth". The Irish Times. 28 February 1895. p. 5.
  17. ^ Neiligh O Cléirigh – Hardship and High Living: Irish Women's Lives 1808–1923. Portobello Press, 2003. ISBN 0-9519249-1-5
  18. ^ Biddy Macken, Schools Folklore Collection accessed 26 September 2011
  19. ^ Fauske & Kaufman 2004, p. 11.
  20. ^ Fauske & Kaufman 2004, p. 44.
  21. ^ Butler 1972, p. 345.
  22. ^ Elizabeth Grubgeld (2004). Anglo-Irish autobiography: class, gender, and the forms of narrative. Syracuse University Press. pp. 139–140. ISBN 9780815630418.
  23. ^ Deane, Seamus (25 February 1999). Strange Country. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198184904.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-818490-4.
  24. ^ a b c d e f Esther Wohlgemut (1999). "Maria Edgeworth and the Question of National Identity". The Nineteenth Century. SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500–1900. 39 (4): 645–658. doi:10.2307/1556266. JSTOR 1556266.
  25. ^ Fauske & Kaufman 2004, p. 37.
  26. ^ Butler 1972, p. 187.
  27. ^ Fauske & Kaufman 2004, p. 49.
  28. ^ Maria Edgeworth (1893). Helen. London: George Routledge and Sons. p. 260
  29. ^ Butler 1972, p. 451.
  30. ^ Edgeworth & Lovell 1798.
  31. ^ a b c d e f Noah Sobe (February 2010). "Concentration and Civilization: Producing the Attentive Child in the Age of Enlightenment". Paedagogica Historica. 46 (2): 149–160. doi:10.1080/00309230903528520. S2CID 145231412.
  32. ^ Twomey, Ryan "The Child is Father of the Man": Importance of Juvenilia in the Development of the Author. Netherlands: Hes & De Graaf, 2012,
  33. ^ Maria Edgeworth (2014). The Double Disguise. Ed. Christine Alexander Ryan Twomey. Sydney: Juvenilia Press.
  34. ^ Samuel Orchart Beeton (1874). Beeton's Modern European Celebrities: A Biography of Continental Men and Women of Note. London: Ward, Locke and Tyler. p. 32.
  35. ^ Joseph-Marie Quérard (1842). La littérature française contemporaine: XIXe siècle. Vol. 1. Paris: Daguin Frères. pp. 254–56. petite manuel de morale elementaire belloc.
  36. ^ Anne-Louise Swanton Belloc. "Papers of Louise Swanton Belloc" (Journals, biographical materials, family papers, and correspondence). Janus (Cambridge University Archives). Personal Papers of Bessie Rayner Parkes: Cambridge University.
  37. ^ John Chapple (1997). Elizabeth Gaskell: The Early Years. Manchester: Manchester UP. p. 191. ISBN 0-7190-2550-8.
  38. ^ Keown, Edwina (1 February 2011), Quinn, James (ed.), "Edgeworth, Maria", Dictionary of Irish Biography, Royal Irish Academy, doi:10.3318/dib.002882.v2, retrieved 25 May 2023
  39. ^ Harden 1984, p. 1.
  40. ^ Etskovitz, Joani (6 May 2020). "Making and Measuring Education at Home: From Maria Edgeworth to the Kid Interrupting Your Attempt to Read These Words". Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  41. ^ Harden 1984, p. 26.
  42. ^ Harden 1984, p. 27.
  43. ^ RIA Dictionary of Irish Biography, 2009. p. 577
  44. ^ Harden 1984, p. 50.
  45. ^ Harden 1984, p. 88.
  46. ^ Harden 1984, p. 90.
  47. ^ a b c d e f g Joanne Altieri (December 1968). "Style and Purpose in Maria Edgeworth's Fiction". Nineteenth-Century Fiction. 23 (3): 265–278. doi:10.2307/2932555. JSTOR 2932555.
  48. ^ a b c d e f g Michael Gamer (Spring 2001). "Maria Edgeworth and the Romances of Real Life". Novel: A Forum on Fiction. 34 (2): 232–266. doi:10.2307/1346217. JSTOR 1346217.
  49. ^ Nash 2006, Nash, J. Introduction: A Story to Tell p.xiii.
  50. ^ Edgeworth 2013.
  51. ^ Butler 1972, p. 1.
  52. ^ Tomás Ó hAilín, 'Irish Revival Movements' in Brian Ó Cuív, A View of the Irish Language (Dublin, 1969), p. 93
  53. ^ Robert Welch (1988). A History of Verse Translation from the Irish, 1789–1897. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 90–. ISBN 978-0-86140-249-6.

Sources edit

  • Butler, Marilyn (1972). Maria Edgeworth: A Literary Biography. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198120179. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  • Edgeworth, Maria; Lovell, Richard (1798). Practical Education. London: J. Johnson.
  • Fauske, Chris; Kaufman, Heidi, eds. (2004). An Uncomfortable Authority. Newark: University of Delaware Press.
  • Harden, Elizabeth (1984). Maria Edgeworth. Boston: Twayne Publishers. ISBN 9780805768794.
  • McCormack, W. J. (2015). "Edgeworth, Maria (1768–1849), novelist and educationist". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/8476. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Nash, Julie, ed. (2006). New Essays on Maria Edgeworth. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-7546-5175-8.
  • "Maria Edgeworth: Anglo-Irish author". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2014. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  • "Edgeworth Papers. Collection List 40" (PDF). National Library of Ireland. p. 112. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
  • "Edgeworth Collection (Longford County Library)". Ask About Ireland. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
  • "Edgeworth, Maria (1768–1849), novelist and children's writer". The National Archives (UK). Retrieved 31 March 2015.

Further reading edit

  • Alpini, Gloria (2009). Translating Social Action Texts: Mary Wollstonecraft & Maria Edgeworth. Fano, Italia: Aras Edizioni. p. 227. ISBN 978-88-96378-07-6.
  • Colvin, Christina, ed. (1971). Maria Edgeworth: Letters from England, 1813-1844. Clarendon Press.
  • Curtis, Stanley James; Boultwood, Myrtle E. A. (1977). A short history of educational ideas (5th ed.). University Tutorial Press. ISBN 9780723107675.
  • Gonzalez, Alexander G., ed. (2006). Irish women writers : an A-to-Z guide. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. ISBN 9780313328831.
  • Iles, Kate. . Revolutionary Players. Archived from the original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  • Langdon, Alison Ganze (2012). . The Year's Work in Medievalism. 27. Archived from the original on 22 October 2013.
  • MacDonald, Edgar E. (1977). The Education of the Heart: The Correspondence of Rachel Mordecai Lazarus and Maria Edgeworth. UNC Press. ISBN 9781469606095. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  • Manly, Susan (2012). "Maria Edgeworth (1768-1849)" (PDF). Biographies of Women Writers. Chawton House Library. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
  • Moynahan, Julian (1995), "Maria Edgeworth" in Anglo-Irish: The Literary Imagination in a Hyphenated Culture, Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0691037578
  • Myers, Mitzi (Winter 1999). (PDF). Princeton University Library Chronicle. 60 (2): 220–250. doi:10.25290/prinunivlibrchro.60.2.0220. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 November 2018. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
  • O'Connor, Maura (2010). The Development of Infant Education in Ireland, 1838-1948: Epochs and Eras. Bern: Lang. ISBN 9783034301428. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  • "The Four Wives of Richard Lovell Edgewort & The Children of Richard Lovell Edgeworth" (Images). English-Irish Edgeworths. House of Edgeworth, South Carolina. Retrieved 24 March 2015.

Historical sources edit

  • Cornhill Magazine (11 November 1882). "Miss Edgeworth". The Living Age. 155 (2003): 323–337. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  • Cornhill Magazine (9 December 1882). "Miss Edgeworth". The Living Age. 155 (2007): 595–608. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  • Hare, Augustus John Cuthbert, ed. (1895). The Life and Letters of Maria Edgeworth vol. I. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin. ISBN 9781465521088. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  • Lawless, Emily (1904). Maria Edgeworth. London: Macmillan. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  • Lovett, Richard (1888). Irish pictures drawn with pen and pencil. London: The Religious Tract Society. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
    • Edgeworthstown
  • Oliver, Grace Atkinson (1882). A Study of Maria Edgeworth: With Notices of Her Father and Friends (2nd. ed.). Boston: A. Williams and Company. Retrieved 5 September 2015.

External links edit

Electronic editions edit

  • Works by Maria Edgeworth in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by Maria Edgeworth at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by Maria Edgeworth at Faded Page (Canada)
  • Works by or about Maria Edgeworth at Internet Archive
  • Works by Maria Edgeworth at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • . eBooks@Adelaide. University of Adelaide. 2014. Archived from the original on 17 March 2015. Retrieved 31 March 2015.

maria, edgeworth, january, 1768, 1849, prolific, anglo, irish, novelist, adults, children, literature, first, realist, writers, children, literature, significant, figure, evolution, novel, europe, held, critical, views, estate, management, politics, education,. Maria Edgeworth 1 January 1768 22 May 1849 was a prolific Anglo Irish novelist of adults and children s literature She was one of the first realist writers in children s literature and was a significant figure in the evolution of the novel in Europe 2 She held critical views on estate management politics and education and corresponded with some of the leading literary and economic writers including Sir Walter Scott and David Ricardo During the first decade of the 19th century she was one of the most widely read novelists in Britain and Ireland Her name today most commonly associated with Castle Rackrent her first novel in which she adopted an Irish Catholic voice to narrate the dissipation and decline of a family from her own landed Anglo Irish class Maria EdgeworthMaria Edgeworth by John Downman 1807Born 1768 01 01 1 January 1768Black Bourton Oxfordshire EnglandDied22 May 1849 1849 05 22 aged 81 Edgeworthstown County Longford IrelandOccupationWriter novelist NationalityBritish IrishPeriod18th centuryGenreRegionalism Romantic novel children s literatureRelativesRichard Lovell Edgeworth Father 1744 1817 Anna Maria Elers Mother 1743 1773 1 Signature Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life 1 2 Travels 1 3 Later life 2 Views 2 1 Ireland 2 2 Social 2 3 Education 3 Work 3 1 Style and purpose 3 2 List of published works 4 Legacy 5 Notes 6 References 7 Sources 8 Further reading 8 1 Historical sources 9 External links 9 1 Electronic editionsLife editEarly life edit Maria Edgeworth was born at Black Bourton Oxfordshire She was the second child of Richard Lovell Edgeworth who eventually fathered twenty two surviving children by four wives and Anna Maria Edgeworth nee Elers Maria was thus an aunt of Francis Ysidro Edgeworth 3 She spent her early years with her mother s family in England living at The Limes now known as Edgeworth House in Northchurch by Berkhamsted in Hertfordshire 4 5 Her mother died when Maria was five and when her father married his second wife Honora Sneyd in 1773 she went with him to his estate Edgeworthstown in County Longford Ireland citation needed nbsp Edgeworthstown House IrelandMaria was sent to Mrs Lattafiere s school in Derby after Honora fell ill in 1775 After Honora died in 1780 Maria s father married Honora s sister Elizabeth then socially disapproved and legally forbidden from 1833 until the Deceased Wife s Sister s Marriage Act 1907 Maria transferred to Mrs Devis s school in London Her father s attention became fully focused on her in 1781 when she nearly lost her sight to an eye infection 1 Returning home at the age of 14 she took charge of her many younger siblings 6 and was home tutored in law Irish economics and politics science and literature by her father She also started her lifelong correspondences with learned men mainly members of the Lunar Society citation needed She became her father s assistant in managing the Edgeworthstown estate which had become run down during the family s 1777 1782 absence she would live and write there for the rest of her life With their bond strengthened Maria and her father began a lifelong academic collaboration of which she was the more able and nimble mind 1 Present at Edgeworthstown was an extended family servants and tenants She observed and recorded the details of daily Irish life later drawing on this experience for her novels about the Irish She also mixed with the Anglo Irish gentry particularly Kitty Pakenham later the wife of Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington Lady Moira and her aunt Margaret Ruxton of Blackcastle 7 Margaret supplied her with the novels of Ann Radcliffe and William Godwin and encouraged her in her writing 8 Travels edit In 1798 Richard married Frances Beaufort daughter of Daniel Augustus Beaufort who instigated the idea of travelling to England and the European continent Frances a year younger than Maria became her lifelong confidante The family travelled first to London in 1800 citation needed In 1802 the Edgeworths toured the English midlands They then travelled to the continent first to Brussels and then to Consulate France during the Peace of Amiens a brief lull in the Napoleonic Wars They met all the notables and Maria received a marriage proposal from a Swedish courtier Count Edelcrantz Her letter on the subject seems very cool but her stepmother assures us in the Augustus Hare Life and Letters that Maria loved him very much and did not get over the affair quickly They came home to Ireland in 1803 on the eve of the resumption of the wars and Maria returned to writing Tales of Fashionable Life The Absentee and Ormond are novels of Irish life 8 Edgeworth was an extremely popular author who was compared with her contemporary writers Jane Austen and Sir Walter Scott She initially earned more than them and used her income to help her siblings 9 On a visit to London in 1813 where she was received as a literary lion Maria met Lord Byron whom she disliked and Humphry Davy She entered into a long correspondence with the ultra Tory Sir Walter Scott after the publication of Waverley in 1814 in which he gratefully acknowledged her influence and they formed a lasting friendship She visited him in Scotland at Abbotsford House in 1823 where he took her on a tour of the area 8 The next year Sir Walter visited Edgeworthstown When passing through the village one of the party wrote We found neither mud hovels nor naked peasantry but snug cottages and smiles all about 10 A counter view was provided by another visitor who stated that the residents of Edgeworthstown treated Edgeworth with contempt refusing even to feign politeness 11 Later life edit nbsp Maria Edgeworth c 1841Richard Edgeworth was comparatively fair and forgiving in his dealings with his tenants and was actively involved in the estate s management After debating the issue with the economist David Ricardo Maria came to believe that better management and the further application of science to agriculture would raise food production and lower prices 12 Both Richard and Maria were also in favour of Catholic Emancipation enfranchisement for Catholics without property restrictions although he admitted it was against his own interest agricultural reform and increased educational opportunities for women 13 14 She particularly worked hard to improve the living standards of the poor in Edgeworthstown In trying to improve conditions in the village she provided schools for the local children of all denominations 15 After her father s death in 1817 she edited his memoirs and extended them with her biographical comments She was an active writer to the last citation needed She worked for the relief of the famine stricken Irish peasants during the Great Famine She wrote Orlandino for the benefit of the Relieve Fund 16 Her letters to the Quaker Relief Committee provide a vivid account of the desperate plight facing the tenants in Edgeworthstown the extreme conditions under which they lived and the struggle to obtain whatever aid and assistance she could to alleviate their plight 17 18 Through her efforts she received gifts for the poor from America 16 During the Irish Famine Edgeworth insisted that only those of her tenants who had paid their rent in full would receive relief Edgeworth also punished those of her tenants who voted against her Tory preferences 11 With the election of William Rowan Hamilton to president of the Royal Irish Academy Maria became a dominant source of advice for Hamilton particularly on the issue of literature in Ireland She suggested that women should be allowed to participate in events held by the academy For her guidance and help Hamilton made Edgeworth an honorary member of the Royal Irish Academy in 1837 following in the footsteps of Louisa Beaufort a former member of the academy and a relative of hers 1 After a visit to see her relations in Trim Maria now in her eighties began to feel heart pains and died suddenly of a heart attack in Edgeworthstown on 22 May 1849 1 Views edit nbsp Miniature of Edgeworth by Adam Buck c 1790Though Maria Edgeworth spent most of her childhood in England her life in Ireland had a profound impact on both her thinking and views surrounding her Irish culture Fauske and Kaufman conclude She used her fiction to address the inherent problems of acts delineated by religious national racial class based sexual and gendered identities 19 Edgeworth used works such Castle Rackrent and Harrington to express her feelings on controversial issues citation needed Ireland edit In her works Edgeworth created a nostalgic past of Ireland in an attempt to celebrate Irish culture Suvendrini Perera said Edgeworth s novels traced the gradual anglicanization of feudal Irish society Edgeworth s goal in her works was to show the Irish as equal to the English and therefore warranting equal though not separate status Essay on Irish Bulls rejects an English stereotype of Irishmen and portrays them accurately in realistic everyday settings 20 This is a common theme in her Irish works combating the caricatured Irish with accurate representations 21 In her work Edgeworth also places focus on the linguistic differences between Irish and English societies as a foil to how dynamic and intricate Irish society was in spite of English stereotypes 22 Novelist Seamus Deane connected Edgeworth s depiction of Ireland and its relationship to England as being in line with wider Enlightenment ideals noting that Edgeworth was not the first novelist to have chosen Ireland as her scene but she was the first to realize that there was within it a missionary opportunity to convert it to Enlightenment faith and rescue it from its romantic conditions 23 Edgeworth s writing of Ireland especially her early Irish tales offer an important rearticulation of Burkean local attachment and philosophical cosmopolitanism to produce an understanding of the nation as neither tightly bordered like nations based on historical premises such as blood or inheritance or not borderless like those based on rational notions of universal inclusion 24 Edgeworth used her writing to reconsider the meaning of the denomination Anglo Irish and through her interrogation she reinterpreted both cosmopolitan and national definitions of belonging so as to reconstitute Anglo Irish less as a category than as an ongoing mediation between borders 24 In Edgeworth s Irish novels education is the key to both individual and national improvement according to Edgeworth it is the foundation of the well governed estate and the foundation of the well governed nation 24 More specifically a slow process of education instils transnational understanding in the Irish people while retaining the bonds of local attachment by which the nation is secured 24 The centrality of education not only suggests Edgeworth s wish for a rooted yet cosmopolitan or transnational judgment but also distinguishes her writing from constructions of national identity as national character linking her through to earlier cosmopolitan constructions of universal human subjects 24 By claiming national difference as anchored in education culture rather than nature Edgeworth gives to national identity a sociocultural foundation and thereby opens a space in which change can happen 24 Social edit Maria agreed with the Act of Union but thought that it should not be passed against the wishes of the Irish people Concerning education she thought boys and girls should be educated equally and together drawing upon Rousseau s ideas 25 She believed a woman should only marry someone who suits her in character temper and understanding 26 Becoming an old maid was preferable to an incompatible union The story Vivian from Tales of Fashionable Life and Patronage attack eighteenth century English Whig governance of Ireland as corrupt and unrepresentative 27 Edgeworth strove for the self realization of women and stressed the importance of the individual She also wanted greater participation in politics by middle class women Her work Helen clearly demonstrates this point in the passage Women are now so highly cultivated and political subjects are at present of so much importance of such high interest to all human creatures who live together in society you can hardly expect Helen that you as a rational being can go through the world as it now is without forming any opinion on points of public importance You cannot I conceive satisfy yourself with the common namby pamby little missy phrase ladies have nothing to do with politics 28 She sympathised with Catholics and supported gradual though not immediate Catholic Emancipation 29 Education edit nbsp First edition title page to Practical Education 1798In her 1798 book Practical Education 30 she advanced a scientific approach to education acknowledging the difficulty of doing such research which was patiently reduced to an experimental science She claimed no adherence to a school of thought no new theory and purposefully avoided religion and politics In the book s 25 chapters she presages modern improvements to age related educational materials for example in geography maps bordered with suitable illustrated biographies in chronology something besides merely committing names and dates to memory in chemistry safe chemical experiments that children might undertake She maintained that unnecessarily causing fatigue should be a great concern of educators 31 To help illustrate the care that must be taken in teaching children and to emphasise the necessity of properly directing and managing their attentiveness Maria Edgeworth drew several comparisons with non European peoples 31 In making the point that any mode of instruction that tired the attention was hurtful to children her reasoning was that people can pay attention only to one thing at a time and because children can appear resistant to repetition teachers naturally should vary things 31 However educators should always be mindful of the fact that while variety relieves the mind the objects which are varied must not all be entirely new for novelty and variety when joined fatigue the mind as Edgeworth states 31 The teaching of children needed to follow carefully considered methods needed to evidence concern for appropriateness and proper sequencing and needed to be guided by consideration from forms of teaching that would be empowering and enabling not fatiguing or disabling 31 In Edgeworth s work the attention of the child appears as a key site for pedagogical work and interventions 31 Work edit nbsp Library at Edgeworthstown House 1888Edgeworth s early literary efforts have often been considered melodramatic rather than realistic Recent scholarship 32 however has uncovered the importance of Edgeworth s previously unpublished juvenilia manuscript The Double Disguise 1786 33 In particular The Double Disguise signals Edgeworth s turn toward realism and is now considered a seminal regional narrative predating Castle Rackrent 1800 In addition Edgeworth wrote many children s novels that conveyed moral lessons to their audience often in partnership with her friend Louise Swanton Belloc a French writer translator and advocate for the education of women and children whose many translations of Edgeworth s works were largely responsible for her popularity in France 34 35 36 37 One of her schoolgirl novels features a villain who wore a mask made from the skin of a dead man s face Edgeworth s first published work was Letters for Literary Ladies in 1795 This work was a response to Thomas Day s a member of the Lunar Society belief that women should not be authors or taught to think 38 Her work An Essay on the Noble Science of Self Justification 1795 is written for a female audience in which she convinces women that the fair sex is endowed with an art of self justification and women should use their gifts to continually challenge the force and power of men especially their husbands with wit and intelligence It humorously and satirically explores the feminine argumentative method 9 This was followed in 1796 by her first children s book The Parent s Assistant which included Edgeworth s celebrated short story The Purple Jar The Parent s Assistant was influenced by her father s work and perspectives on children s education 6 Mr Edgeworth a well known author and inventor encouraged his daughter s career At the height of her creative endeavours Maria wrote Seriously it was to please my Father I first exerted myself to write to please him I continued 39 Though the impetus for Maria s works Mr Edgeworth has been criticised for his insistence on approving and editing her work The tales in The Parent s Assistant were approved by her father before he would allow them to be read to her younger siblings It is speculated that her stepmother and siblings also helped in the editing process of Edgeworth s work 40 Practical Education 1798 notes 1 is a progressive work on education that combines the ideas of Locke and Rousseau with scientific inquiry Edgeworth asserts that learning should be a positive experience and that the discipline of education is more important during the formative years than the acquisition of knowledge 41 The system attempted to adapt both the curriculum and methods of teaching to the needs of the child the endeavour to explain moral habits and the learning process through associationism and most important the effort to entrust the child with the responsibility for his own mental culture 42 The ultimate goal of Edgeworth s system was to create an independent thinker who understands the consequences of his or her actions citation needed Her first novel Castle Rackrent 1800 was written and submitted for anonymous publication in 1800 without her father s knowledge It was an immediate success and firmly established Edgeworth s appeal 8 The book is a satire on Anglo Irish landlords before the year 1782 showing the need for more responsible management by the Irish landowning class The story follows four generations of an Irish landholding family the Rackrents It is narrated by an Irish catholic worker on the estate named Thady Quirk and portrayed the rise of the catholic Irish middle class 43 Belinda 1801 a 3 volume work published in London was Maria Edgeworth s first full length novel It dealt with love courtship and marriage dramatising the conflicts within her own personality and environment conflicts between reason and feeling restraint and individual freedom and society and free spirit 44 Belinda was also notable for its controversial depiction of interracial marriage between a Black servant and an English farmgirl Later editions of the novel however removed these sections notes 2 Tales of Fashionable Life 1809 and 1812 is a 2 series collection of short stories which often focus on the life of a woman 1 The second series was particularly well received in England making her the most commercially successful novelist of her age After this Edgeworth was regarded as the preeminent female writer in England alongside Jane Austen 1 Following an anti Semitic remark in The Absentee Edgeworth received a letter from an American Jewish woman named Rachel Mordecai in 1815 complaining about Edgeworth s depiction of Jews 45 In response Harrington 1817 was written as an apology to the Jewish community The novel was a fictitious autobiography about overcoming antisemitism and includes one of the first sympathetic Jewish characters in an English novel 46 Helen 1834 is Maria Edgeworth s final novel the only one she wrote after her father s death She chose to write a novel focused on the characters and situation rather than moral lessons 1 In a letter to her publisher Maria wrote I have been reproached for making my moral in some stories too prominent I am sensible of the inconvenience of this both to reader and writer amp have taken much pains to avoid it in Helen 1 Her novel is also set in England a conscious choice as Edgeworth found Ireland too troubling for a fictitious work in the political climate of the 1830s 1 Style and purpose edit nbsp Maria EdgeworthHaving come to her literary maturity at a time when the ubiquitous and unvarying stated defence of the novel was its educative power Maria Edgeworth was among the few authors who truly espoused the educator s role 47 Her novels are morally and socially didactic in the extreme A close analysis of the alterations which Edgeworth s style underwent when it was pressed into the service of overt didacticism should serve to illuminate the relationship between prose technique and didactic purpose in her work 47 The convention which Maria Edgeworth has adopted and worked to death is basic to the eighteenth century novel but its roots lie in the drama tracing at least to the Renaissance separation of high and low characters by their forms of speech 47 Throughout the eighteenth century drama and most noticeably in the sentimental comedy the separation becomes more and more a means of moral judgment as well as social identification 47 The only coherent reason for Edgeworth s acceptance is the appeal of didactic moralism In the first place she is willing to suspend judgment wherever the service of the moral is the result 47 Everything else may go so long as the lesson is enforced the lesson might be a warning against moral impropriety as in Miss Milner s story or against social injustice as in The Absentee 47 Furthermore the whole reliance on positive exemplars had been justified long before by Richard Steele who argued that the stage must supply perfect heroes since its examples are imitated and since simple natures are incapable of making the necessary deductions from the negative exemplars of satire 47 The characteristic of Edgeworth is to connect an identifiable strain of formal realism both philosophical and rhetorical and therefore display an objective interest in human nature and the way it manifests itself in social custom 48 One would expect this from Edgeworth an author whose didacticism often has struck modern readers as either gendered liability technical regression or familial obligation 48 Critics have responded to Edgeworth s eccentricities by attributing them to something more deep seated temperamental and psychological 48 In their various often insightful representation Edgeworth s fondness for the real the strange and the pedagogically useful verges on the relentless the obsessive and the instinctive 48 There is an alternative literary answer to explain Edgeworth s cultural roots and ideological aims which shifts focus away from Edgeworth s familial psychological and cultural predicaments to the formal paradigms by which her work has been judged 48 Rather than locating Edgeworth s early romances of real life exclusively within the traditions of eighteenth century children s literature or domestic realism they can be read primarily as responses to late eighteenth century debates over the relation between history and romance because the genre attempts to mediate between the two differentiating itself from other kinds of factual fiction 48 Edgeworth s romances of real life operate in the same discursive field but do not attempt to traverse between self denied antinomies 48 In fact they usually make the opposite claim citation needed Edgeworth s repeated self effacement needs to be seen in the context of the times where learning in women was often disapproved of and even ridiculed such as the satirical poem of the Rev Richard Polwhele The Unsex d Females 1798 49 List of published works edit A partial list of published works 50 Letters for Literary Ladies 1795 Second Edition 1798 includes An Essay on the Noble Science of Self Justification 1795 The Parent s Assistant 1796 Practical Education 1798 2 vols collaborated with her father Richard Lovell Edgeworth and step mother Honora Sneyd Castle Rackrent 1800 novel Edgeworth Maria 1801 Early Lessons 1st ed London Johnson Moral Tales 1801 Belinda 1801 novel The Mental Thermometer 1801 Essay on Irish Bulls 1802 political collaborated with her father Popular Tales 1804 The Modern Griselda 1804 Moral Tales for Young People 1805 6 vols Leonora 1806 written during the French excursion Essays in Professional Education 1809 Tales of Fashionable Life 1809 and 1812 2 collections of stories the second of which includes The Absentee Ennui 1809 novel The Absentee 1812 novel Patronage 1814 novel Harrington 1817 novel Ormond 1817 novel Comic Dramas 1817 Memoirs of Richard Lovell Edgeworth 1820 edited her father s memoirs Rosamond A Sequel to Early Lessons 1821 Frank A Sequel to Frank in Early Lessons 1822 Tomorrow 1823 novel Helen 1834 novel Orlandino 1848 temperance novel Also Edgeworth Maria 1820 RL Edgeworth Esq The Annual Register Part II 1215 1223 Edgeworth Maria 2013 Complete Novels of Maria Edgeworth Illustrated Delphi Classics Hall S C 1849 Edgeworthstown Memories of Maria Edgeworth Living Age 22 320 329 Retrieved 30 March 2015 Legacy editDuring the period 1800 1814 when Walter Scott s Waverley was published Edgeworth was the most celebrated and successful living English novelist Her reputation equalled that of Fanny Burney Madame d Arblay 1752 1840 earlier in a time that saw a number of other female writers including Elizabeth Hamilton Amelia Opie Hannah More and Elizabeth Inchbald Her only potential male competitor prior to Scott was William Godwin She was certainly well received by the critics and literary figures of her time Croker 1780 1857 compared her work to Don Quixote and Gil Blas and to the work of Henry Fielding while Francis Jeffrey 1773 1850 called her work perfect 51 The Ulster Gaelic Society established in 1830 succeeded in a single publication in its history namely the translation into Irish of two stories by Maria Edgeworth 52 Tomas o Fiannachtaigh translated Forgive and Forget and Rosanna into Irish in the 1830s 53 Notes edit Ostensibly a collaborative project between father and daughter but in reality a family project Nash 2006 p 59 See Introduction to World Classics edition of Belinda page xxvii written by Kathryn Kirkpatrick In the 1810 edition of her novel Edgeworth effectively rewrote her representation of romantic relationships between English women and West Indian men both Creole and African She felt her novel so changed she described it to her aunt as a twice told tale And that she retold her story to omit even the possibility of unions between English women and West Indian men is significant For it suggests that in order for Belinda to merit inclusion in a series defining the British novel Edgeworth had to make her colonial characters less visible less integrated socially into English society And she certainly had to banish the spectre of inter racial marriage Edgeworth herself said she removed the Juba Lucy interracial marriage because my father has great delicacies and scruples of conscience about encouraging such marriage References edit a b c d e f g h i j McCormack 2015 Encyclopaedia Britannica 2014 Keown Edwina 1 February 2011 Quinn James ed Edgeworth Maria Dictionary of Irish Biography Royal Irish Academy doi 10 3318 dib 002882 v2 retrieved 25 May 2023 Historic England Edgeworth House 1342141 National Heritage List for England retrieved 11 June 2021 Wreyford Paul 2008 Literary Buckinghamshire History Press ISBN 978 0 7509 5342 9 Retrieved 11 June 2021 a b Jane Donawerth 2002 Rhetorical Theory By Women Before 1900 Lanham MD Rowman amp LittleField pp 130 131 ISBN 0 7425 1717 9 Blackcastle House Navan amp District Historical Society Retrieved 13 May 2019 a b c d Henry Boylan 1998 A Dictionary of Irish Biography 3rd Edition Dublin Gill and MacMillan p 120 ISBN 0 7171 2945 4 a b Jane Donawerth 2002 Rhetorical Theory By Women Before 1900 Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield Maria Edgeworth The Irish Times 12 September 1903 a b Michael Hurst 1969 Maria Edgeworth and the Public Scene Fla Coral p 94 Kern William Maria Edgeworth and Classical Political Economy Publications American Economic Association Committee on the Status of Women in the Economics Profession Archived from the original on 25 July 2011 Retrieved 1 October 2011 Butler 1972 p 112 Sharon Murphy 2004 Maria Edgeworth and Romance Dublin Four Courts Press ISBN 1 85182 852 4 Lord Longford 23 May 1949 Memorial Service Maria Edgeworth The Irish Times p 5 a b Maria Edgeworth The Irish Times 28 February 1895 p 5 Neiligh O Cleirigh Hardship and High Living Irish Women s Lives 1808 1923 Portobello Press 2003 ISBN 0 9519249 1 5 Biddy Macken Schools Folklore Collection accessed 26 September 2011 Fauske amp Kaufman 2004 p 11 Fauske amp Kaufman 2004 p 44 Butler 1972 p 345 Elizabeth Grubgeld 2004 Anglo Irish autobiography class gender and the forms of narrative Syracuse University Press pp 139 140 ISBN 9780815630418 Deane Seamus 25 February 1999 Strange Country Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780198184904 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 818490 4 a b c d e f Esther Wohlgemut 1999 Maria Edgeworth and the Question of National Identity The Nineteenth Century SEL Studies in English Literature 1500 1900 39 4 645 658 doi 10 2307 1556266 JSTOR 1556266 Fauske amp Kaufman 2004 p 37 Butler 1972 p 187 Fauske amp Kaufman 2004 p 49 Maria Edgeworth 1893 Helen London George Routledge and Sons p 260 Butler 1972 p 451 Edgeworth amp Lovell 1798 a b c d e f Noah Sobe February 2010 Concentration and Civilization Producing the Attentive Child in the Age of Enlightenment Paedagogica Historica 46 2 149 160 doi 10 1080 00309230903528520 S2CID 145231412 Twomey Ryan The Child is Father of the Man Importance of Juvenilia in the Development of the Author Netherlands Hes amp De Graaf 2012 Maria Edgeworth 2014 The Double Disguise Ed Christine Alexander Ryan Twomey Sydney Juvenilia Press Samuel Orchart Beeton 1874 Beeton s Modern European Celebrities A Biography of Continental Men and Women of Note London Ward Locke and Tyler p 32 Joseph Marie Querard 1842 La litterature francaise contemporaine XIXe siecle Vol 1 Paris Daguin Freres pp 254 56 petite manuel de morale elementaire belloc Anne Louise Swanton Belloc Papers of Louise Swanton Belloc Journals biographical materials family papers and correspondence Janus Cambridge University Archives Personal Papers of Bessie Rayner Parkes Cambridge University John Chapple 1997 Elizabeth Gaskell The Early Years Manchester Manchester UP p 191 ISBN 0 7190 2550 8 Keown Edwina 1 February 2011 Quinn James ed Edgeworth Maria Dictionary of Irish Biography Royal Irish Academy doi 10 3318 dib 002882 v2 retrieved 25 May 2023 Harden 1984 p 1 Etskovitz Joani 6 May 2020 Making and Measuring Education at Home From Maria Edgeworth to the Kid Interrupting Your Attempt to Read These Words Los Angeles Review of Books Retrieved 18 March 2023 Harden 1984 p 26 Harden 1984 p 27 RIA Dictionary of Irish Biography 2009 p 577 Harden 1984 p 50 Harden 1984 p 88 Harden 1984 p 90 a b c d e f g Joanne Altieri December 1968 Style and Purpose in Maria Edgeworth s Fiction Nineteenth Century Fiction 23 3 265 278 doi 10 2307 2932555 JSTOR 2932555 a b c d e f g Michael Gamer Spring 2001 Maria Edgeworth and the Romances of Real Life Novel A Forum on Fiction 34 2 232 266 doi 10 2307 1346217 JSTOR 1346217 Nash 2006 Nash J Introduction A Story to Tell p xiii Edgeworth 2013 Butler 1972 p 1 Tomas o hAilin Irish Revival Movements in Brian o Cuiv A View of the Irish Language Dublin 1969 p 93 Robert Welch 1988 A History of Verse Translation from the Irish 1789 1897 Rowman amp Littlefield pp 90 ISBN 978 0 86140 249 6 Sources editButler Marilyn 1972 Maria Edgeworth A Literary Biography Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198120179 Retrieved 31 March 2015 Edgeworth Maria Lovell Richard 1798 Practical Education London J Johnson Fauske Chris Kaufman Heidi eds 2004 An Uncomfortable Authority Newark University of Delaware Press Harden Elizabeth 1984 Maria Edgeworth Boston Twayne Publishers ISBN 9780805768794 McCormack W J 2015 Edgeworth Maria 1768 1849 novelist and educationist Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8476 Subscription or UK public library membership required Nash Julie ed 2006 New Essays on Maria Edgeworth Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 59 ISBN 978 0 7546 5175 8 Maria Edgeworth Anglo Irish author Encyclopaedia Britannica 2014 Retrieved 31 March 2015 Edgeworth Papers Collection List 40 PDF National Library of Ireland p 112 Retrieved 29 March 2015 Edgeworth Collection Longford County Library Ask About Ireland Retrieved 30 March 2015 Edgeworth Maria 1768 1849 novelist and children s writer The National Archives UK Retrieved 31 March 2015 Further reading editAlpini Gloria 2009 Translating Social Action Texts Mary Wollstonecraft amp Maria Edgeworth Fano Italia Aras Edizioni p 227 ISBN 978 88 96378 07 6 Colvin Christina ed 1971 Maria Edgeworth Letters from England 1813 1844 Clarendon Press Curtis Stanley James Boultwood Myrtle E A 1977 A short history of educational ideas 5th ed University Tutorial Press ISBN 9780723107675 Gonzalez Alexander G ed 2006 Irish women writers an A to Z guide Westport Conn Greenwood Press ISBN 9780313328831 Iles Kate A Portrait of Maria Edgeworth Revolutionary Players Archived from the original on 20 March 2012 Retrieved 31 March 2015 Langdon Alison Ganze 2012 The More Things Change Maria Edgeworth s The Modern Griselda The Year s Work in Medievalism 27 Archived from the original on 22 October 2013 MacDonald Edgar E 1977 The Education of the Heart The Correspondence of Rachel Mordecai Lazarus and Maria Edgeworth UNC Press ISBN 9781469606095 Retrieved 24 March 2015 Manly Susan 2012 Maria Edgeworth 1768 1849 PDF Biographies of Women Writers Chawton House Library Retrieved 30 March 2015 Moynahan Julian 1995 Maria Edgeworth in Anglo Irish The Literary Imagination in a Hyphenated Culture Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691037578 Myers Mitzi Winter 1999 Anecdotes from the Nursery in Maria Edgeworth s Practical Education 1798 Learning from Children Abroad and At Home PDF Princeton University Library Chronicle 60 2 220 250 doi 10 25290 prinunivlibrchro 60 2 0220 Archived from the original PDF on 18 November 2018 Retrieved 30 March 2015 O Connor Maura 2010 The Development of Infant Education in Ireland 1838 1948 Epochs and Eras Bern Lang ISBN 9783034301428 Retrieved 31 March 2015 The Four Wives of Richard Lovell Edgewort amp The Children of Richard Lovell Edgeworth Images English Irish Edgeworths House of Edgeworth South Carolina Retrieved 24 March 2015 Historical sources edit Cornhill Magazine 11 November 1882 Miss Edgeworth The Living Age 155 2003 323 337 Retrieved 13 September 2015 Cornhill Magazine 9 December 1882 Miss Edgeworth The Living Age 155 2007 595 608 Retrieved 13 September 2015 Hare Augustus John Cuthbert ed 1895 The Life and Letters of Maria Edgeworth vol I Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 9781465521088 Retrieved 24 March 2015 Lawless Emily 1904 Maria Edgeworth London Macmillan Retrieved 24 March 2015 Lovett Richard 1888 Irish pictures drawn with pen and pencil London The Religious Tract Society Retrieved 30 March 2015 Edgeworthstown Oliver Grace Atkinson 1882 A Study of Maria Edgeworth With Notices of Her Father and Friends 2nd ed Boston A Williams and Company Retrieved 5 September 2015 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Maria Edgeworth nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maria Edgeworth nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Maria Edgeworth Works by Maria Edgeworth at Open Library Maria Edgeworth Collection General Collection Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Yale University Electronic editions edit Works by Maria Edgeworth in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Maria Edgeworth at Project Gutenberg Works by Maria Edgeworth at Faded Page Canada Works by or about Maria Edgeworth at Internet Archive Works by Maria Edgeworth at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Maria Edgeworth 1767 1849 eBooks Adelaide University of Adelaide 2014 Archived from the original on 17 March 2015 Retrieved 31 March 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maria Edgeworth amp oldid 1195453556, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.