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Once dismissed as a “purveyor of dangerous inflammatory fiction,” Florence Marryat has suffered a reputation as a trashy and formulaic novelist, unworthy of critical attention. / Critics have consistently overlooked the radicalism of her work, which confronts themes such as marital violence, single motherhood, and female sexuality. By gathering evidence from across the range of her fiction, Catherine Pope establishes Marryat as an important feminist writer – one who consistently challenged prevailing ideas of femininity in both her life and her work. / With a life neatly spanning the Victorian period, Marryat (1833-99) was well placed to experience and to observe the ways in which women’s lives were transformed during the nineteenth century. At the time of her birth, a wife’s legal identity was entirely subsumed into that of her husband; by her death in 1899, women had benefitted from momentous changes that granted them a separate identity and greater rights over their bodies and personal property. As Pope argues, Marryat contributed to the debates that heralded these changes, partly through her ability to produce sensation novels at a prodigious rate, and also by pursuing a scandalous and thoroughly un-Victorian lifestyle.

1 pages, Paperback

Published June 20, 2020

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Catherine Pope

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Profile Image for Fran.
366 reviews142 followers
August 25, 2025
giving this 5 stars because it doesn't have many ratings and I actually found this a super valuable reference. the author works with a lot of manuscripts and old records that are really hard to get ahold of, and she also knows how to actually analyze the stuff she finds (like speculating whether Marryat's eldest daughter died from a botched abortion). the stuff at the end about Marryat making a literal SCUM Manifesto type speech was also absolutely nuts. it's all even more valuable because Marryat is such a neglected writer compared to other sensation authors. highly recommend.
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