Women and Madness in the Early Romantic Novel: Injured Minds, Ruined Lives
By (Author) Deborah Weiss
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
1st December 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
Literary studies: postcolonial literature
Gender studies: women and girls
823.08509
Hardback
288
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 16mm
527g
Women and madness in the early Romantic novel returns madness to a central role in feminist literary criticism through an updated exploration of hysteria, melancholia, and love-madness in novels by Mary Wollstonecraft, Eliza Fenwick, Mary Hays, Maria Edgeworth, and Amelia Opie. This book argues that these early Romantic-period novelists revised medical and popular sentimental models for female madness that made inherent female weakness and the aberrant female body responsible for women's mental afflictions. The book explores how the more radical authors-Wollstonecraft, Fenwick and Hays-blamed men and patriarchal structures of control for their characters' hysteria and melancholia, while the more mainstream writers-Edgeworth and Opie-located causality in less gendered and less victimized accounts. Taken as a whole, the book makes a powerful case for focusing on women's mental health in eighteenth- and nineteenth- century literary criticism.
Deborah Weiss is Associate Professor of English at the University of Alabama