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Author Williams, Helen Maria, 1762-1827. https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJxWYPGyT3WVK3HCvrGPwC

Title Julia (1790) / Helen Maria Williams ; edited by Natasha Duquette.

Imprint Abingdon, Oxon : Routledge, 2016.

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (xxxii, 178 pages)
Series Chawton House library series. Women's novels ; no. 7
Chawton House library series. Woman's novels ; no. 7.
Note Originally published 2010 by Pickering & Chatto (Publishers) Limited.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references.
Contents Chapter CHAP. II. -- chapter CHAP. III. -- chapter CHAP. IV. -- part CHAP. V. -- chapter CHAP. VI. -- chapter CHAP. VII. -- chapter CHAP. VIII. -- chapter CHAP. IX. -- chapter CHAP. X. -- chapter CHAP. XI. -- chapter CHAP. XII. -- chapter CHAP. XIII. -- chapter CHAP. XIV. -- chapter CHAP. XV. -- chapter CHAP. XVI. -- chapter CHAP. XVII. -- chapter CHAP. XVIII. -- part CHAP. XIX. -- chapter CHAP. XX. -- chapter CHAP XXII. -- chapter CHAP. XXIII. -- chapter CHAP. XXIV. -- chapter CHAP. XXV. -- chapter CHAP. XXVI. -- chapter CHAP. XXVII. -- chapter CHAP. XXVIII. -- chapter CHAP. XXIX. -- chapter CHAP. XXX. -- chapter CHAP. XXXI. -- chapter CHAP. XXXII. -- chapter CHAP. XXXIII. -- chapter CHAP. XXXIV. -- chapter ENDNOTES -- Volume I.
Summary Helen Maria Williams's first and only novel <i>Julia</i> has been interpreted as a reworking of Jean-Jacques Rousseau's<i> Julie, ou la Nouvelle Héloïse</i> (1761). Williams's character Julia also shares strong parallels with later poetry-loving heroines such as Adeline in Ann Radcliffe's <i>Romance of the Forest</i> (1791) and Marianne in Jane Austen's <i>Sense and Sensibility </i>(1811). Mary Wollstonecraft admired <i>Julia</i>, and the influence of its proto-feminist themes is evident in her <i>Maria, or the Wrongs of Woman</i> (1798), written after Wollstonecraft met Williams in Paris. <br> This critical edition of<i> Julia</i> is the first modern printing of a novel that blends the character development of a poet with critical reflections on social injustice. Written at the beginning of the French Revolution, the narrative is interspersed with poems on topics ranging from moonlight contemplations in natural landscapes to the terrors of imprisonment in the Bastille. An annotated modern edition of Julia, complete with bio-critical introduction, makes accessible a novel that reveals the interconnections between poetic sensibility, feminine sublimity and revolutionary aesthetics in late eighteenth-century Britain.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Women -- Fiction.
Revolutionary literature, French.
Revolutionary literature, French
Women
Genre/Form Fiction
Added Author Duquette, Natasha.
Other Form: 9781851966622
ISBN 9781315649320 (e-book ; PDF)
1315649322