Feminist Florence Fenwick Miller
, in a Sunday lecture in the year following HM
's death, represented her as one of the shining lights of our time, whose life was one of the most remarkable...
politics
Harriet Martineau
HM
's biographer R. K. Webb
argues that her intellectual and political positions flowed quite logically from her family's business and religious interests: from a kind of radicalism typical of the industrial north. This gave...
Textual Features
Harriet Martineau
Webb
explains the attraction for Martineau of Atkinson's thinking (which he calls second-rate). Both had long held an intense if woolly vision of the future, a future in which alienations from society (their own included)...
Textual Features
Harriet Martineau
HM
's biographer R. K. Webb
notes that she is far from agreeing with Comte on a number of points: she maintains a marked silence here and elsewhere on his belief in female subordination.
Webb, Robert Kiefer. Harriet Martineau: A Radical Victorian. Columbia University Press, 1960.
307
Textual Production
Harriet Martineau
HM
published much of her intellectual work in the form of letters. Her personal letters, however, she strove mightily to control. She lamented in her Autobiography: How could human beings ever open their hearts...
Textual Production
Harriet Martineau
Mesmerism was thoroughly in line with HM
's philosophical beliefs, insofar as it denied the separation of mind and body and sought to discover natural laws governing humanity and tending towards its regeneration. The phreno-magnetists...
Textual Production
Harriet Martineau
It was dated 1851. Her biographer R. K. Webb
claims that the bulk of the book is Atkinson
's, with promptings from Harriet Martineau
, although it certainly also includes substantial letters from her.
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
Webb, Robert Kiefer. Harriet Martineau: A Radical Victorian. Columbia University Press, 1960.
Webb, Robert Kiefer. “Miracles in English Unitarian Thought”. Enlightenment, Passion, Modernity: Historical Essays in European Thought and Culture, edited by Mark S. Micale and Robert L. Dietle, Stanford University Press, 2000, pp. 113-30.