Winegarten, Renee. Mme de Staël. Berg, 1985.
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Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Intertextuality and Influence | Anna Brownell Jameson | The book is also a model of female erudition, peppered with foreign phrases, references to earlier Shakespeare critics, to the visual arts, and to other authors, including the ancient Greek dramatists and the German romanticists... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Maria Jane Jewsbury | The book's first and longest piece, The History of an Enthusiast, is strongly influenced by Germaine de Staël
's novel Corinne; ou, L'Italie. Fryckstedt, Monica Correa. “The Hidden Rill: The Life and Career of Maria Jane Jewsbury, II”. Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library of Manchester, Vol. 67 , No. 1, The Library, 1 Sept.–30 Nov. 1984, pp. 450-73. 451 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Kate Chopin | KC
's earliest surviving works are a commonplace book, and a fable, Emancipation, which she wrote while still at school. The commonplace book contains some early writing on the subject of the independent woman... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Elizabeth Strutt | The title marks it as a refutation of Germaine de Staël
's Delphine. But this was not its only influence. ES
claims to have founded her story on A Residence in France by a... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Blanche Warre Cornish | The title-page quotes Shakespeare
and Germaine de Staël
. The novel introduces its protagonist, William Milton, with generalisations about different types of people, especially those who refuse, out of pride or laziness, to compete for... |
Leisure and Society | Hannah More | Once an omnivorous reader, HM
restricted her choice of books in later life, in line with her religious convictions. She delighted in William Cowper
as a poet whom I can read on Sunday. qtd. in Jones, Mary Gwladys. Hannah More. Cambridge University Press, 1952. 90 |
Literary responses | Harriet Martineau | The Athenæum compared this novel favourably to the work of Jane Austen
, saying that HM
outstripped her predecessor in creating characters of a higher order of mental force and spiritual attainment, and offering to... |
Literary responses | Hannah More | Next year saw a rich crop of reviews. Sydney Smith
in the Edinburgh Review, while praising HM
's style and her skill at manipulating her readers, damned the novel as over-moralized, strained and unnatural... |
Literary responses | Felicia Hemans | |
Literary responses | Sydney Owenson Lady Morgan | Two Belgian ministers of state wrote to express their appreciation. Morgan, Sydney Owenson, Lady. Lady Morgan’s Memoirs. Editors Dixon, William Hepworth and Geraldine Jewsbury, AMS Press, 1975, 2 vols. 2: 391-2 qtd. in Campbell, Mary, 1917 - 2002. Lady Morgan: The Life and Times of Sydney Owenson. Pandora, 1988. 222 |
Literary responses | George Sand | The novel met with high praise from Balzac
, and a critic at the Revue des Deux Mondes thought it better than anything by Germaine de Staël
. These two knew the author's gender, but... |
Literary responses | George Sand | Ellen Moers
, in her ground-breaking Literary Women, 1976, read Consuelo as a key step in the tradition of women writers presenting heroinism through the figure of the woman artist, especially the opera singer... |
Literary responses | Willa Cather | A review by Randolph Bourne
in the USA levelled much the same criticisms as William Heinemann
in England. Cather, Willa. On Writing. Editor Tennant, Stephen, Alfred A. Knopf, 1949. 96 |
Literary responses | Sydney Owenson Lady Morgan | De Staël
is said to have had France read to her on her deathbed, with approbation. Campbell, Mary, 1917 - 2002. Lady Morgan: The Life and Times of Sydney Owenson. Pandora, 1988. 149 |
Literary responses | Lydia Maria Child | John Greenleaf Whittier
felt that this novel, together with LMC
's lives of Manon Roland
and Germaine de Staël
(first volume in The Ladies' Family Library) showed that polemical writing had not harmed her... |
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