
Part of Series
Angela Keane addresses the work of five women writers of the 1790s and its problematic relationship with the canon of Romantic literature. Refining arguments that women's writing has been overlooked, Keane examines the more complex underpinnings and exclusionary effects of the English national literary tradition. The book explores the negotiations of literate, middle-class women such as Hannah More, Mary Wollstonecraft, Charlotte Smith, Helen Maria Williams and Ann Radcliffe with emergent ideas of national literary representation. 1. Introduction: romantic belongings; 2. Domesticating the sublime: Ann Radcliffe and Gothic dissent; 3. Forgotten sentiments: Helen Maria Williams' Letters from France; 4. Exiles and emigrés: the wanderings of Charlotte Smith; 5. Mary Wollstonecraft and the national body; 6. Patrician, populist and patriot: Hannah More's counter-revolutionary nationalism; Afterword.