Helen Maria Williams
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Standard Name: Williams, Helen Maria
Birth Name: Helen Maria Williams
HMW
wrote, during the Romantic or revolutionary period, as a woman with a mission, eager to see change for the better in the political, international world. She was a radical and egalitarian in gender relations too, although she believed that femininity comprised especial sensibility. Despite her two novels (one original and one translated), she is best known for her earlier poetry and her later political commentary on events in France, cast in the form of published letters.
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Textual Production | Elizabeth Moody | The full title is A Sketch of Modern France. In a series of letters to a lady of fashion. Written in the years 1796 and 1797. In his preface Christopher Lake Moody vouches for... |
Textual Production | Ann Batten Cristall | The publisher Joseph Johnson
issued by subscription ABC
's Poetical Sketches: an important text in women's Romanticism. Her title was the same as that of William Blake
's first publication, 1783. Critic Richard C. Sha |
Textual Production | Elizabeth Gilding | Elizabeth Turner (formerly EG
) composed a poem entitled To Miss Helen Maria Williams
, on Her Poem of Peru: it appeared the following month in the Gentleman's Magazine, only a few months after Peru was published. Pitcher, Edward W. Signatures and Pseudonyms of the Eighteenth-Century British Magazines: An Annotated Index in Three Volumes. 2004. |
Textual Production | Charlotte Nooth | His De la littérature des Nègres in its original form reflects internationalism, anglophilia, and perhaps even proto-feminism. The title-page quotes Mary Robinson
. The roll of honour of white activists for abolition and racial equality... |
Textual Production | Isabella Neil Harwood | This three-act romantic drama is founded on the novel by Bernardin de Saint-Pierre
which was titled in its English translation by Helen Maria WilliamsPaul and Virginia, June 1795. After the first act, though... |
Textual Production | Laetitia-Matilda Hawkins | LMH
took issue with Helen Maria Williams
, anonymously, in the polemical Letters on the Female Mind, Its Powers and Pursuits. Fergus, Jan. “Laetitia-Matilda Hawkins’s Anonymous Novels Identified”. Notes and Queries, Vol. 54 , No. 2, June 2007, pp. 152-6. 155 Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford, 1990. |
Textual Production | Mary Hays | George Dyer suggested, about February 1797, that MH
should collaborate with Ann Batten Cristall
on an excellent poetical novel qtd. in Kelly, Gary. Women, Writing, and Revolution 1790-1827. Clarendon, 1993. 111 |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Mary Whateley Darwall | But most poems in this volume are occasional, more or less public. MWD
wrote about buildings: the fake-medieval Hockley Abbey near Birmingham and the genuine medieval Kenilworth Castle. She wrote about Scotland: ballads... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Anne Grant | In a passage that deploys all her own high rhetorical ability she seeks to prove that women's ability is normally inferior to men's. Wollstonecraft's book, which is so run after here, that there is no... |
Travel | Anne Plumptre | AP
set out for France to visit Helen Maria Williams
; she stayed in France for nearly three years. Plumptre, Anne. “Introduction”. Something New, edited by Deborah McLeod, Broadview, 1996, p. vii - xxix. xxvii, x |
Travel | Amelia Opie | They travelled with Anne Plumptre
and stayed with Helen Maria Williams
. They went as far as Naples. |
Timeline
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Texts
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