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BestsellerE-book
Author Horejsi, Nicole, author.

Title Novel Cleopatras : romance historiography and the Dido tradition in English fiction, 1688-1785 / Nicole Horejsi.

Publication Info. Toronto ; Buffalo ; London : University of Toronto Press, 2019.

Item Status

Description 1 online resource
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary "Advocating a revised history of the eighteenth-century novel, Novel Cleopatras showcases its origins in ancient mythology, its relation to epic narrative, and its connection to neoclassical print culture. Novel Cleopatras also rewrites the essential role of women writers in history who were typically underestimated as active participants of neoclassical culture, often excluded from the same schools that taught their brothers Greek and Latin. However, as author Nicole Horejsi reveals, the novel was not only accessible to most women, but a number of exceptional middle-class women were actually serious students of the classics. In order to dismiss the idea that women were completely marginalized as neoclassical writers, Horejsi take up the character of Dido from ancient Greek mythology, and her real-life counter-part, the queen of Egypt, who was eventually reinvented in Virgil's Romance epics as the queen of Carthage. Together, the legendary Dido and historical Cleopatra serve as figures for the conflation of myth and history. Horejsi contends that turning to the doomed queens who haunted the Roman imagination enabled eighteenth-century novelists to seize the productive overlap among the categories of history, romance, the novel, even the epic, and therefore to intervene in one of the founding narratives of Western civilization and rewrite it for their own ends."-- Provided by publisher
Contents Cover; Title; Contents; List of Illustrations; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Part 1: Demythologizing Dido: Epic and Romance; 1 "Pulcherrima Dido": Jane Barker and the Epic of Exile; 2 "What Is There of a Woman Worth Relating?" Revising the Aeneid in Henry Fielding's Amelia; Part 2: Mythologizing Cleopatra: Romance Historiography and the Queens of Egypt; 3 "A Pattern to Ensuing Ages": Reinventing Historical Practice in Charlotte Lennox's Female Quixote; 4 Performing Augustan History in Sarah Fielding's Lives of Cleopatra and Octavia
5 Whose "Wild and Extravagant Stories"? Clara Reeve's The Progress of Romance and The History of Charoba, Queen of ÆgyptEpilogue; Notes; Bibliography; Index
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Cleopatra, Queen of Egypt, -30 B.C. -- In literature.
Dido (Legendary character) -- In literature.
Cleopatra, Queen of Egypt, -30 B.C.
Dido (Legendary character)
English fiction -- 18th century -- History and criticism.
English fiction -- Women authors -- History and criticism.
History in literature.
Mythology in literature.
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY -- Literary.
LITERARY CRITICISM -- Ancient & Classical.
English fiction
English fiction -- Women authors
History in literature
Literature
Mythology in literature
Chronological Term 1700-1799
Indexed Term British literature.
Cleopatra.
Dido.
English fiction.
Greek mythology.
conflation.
eighteenth-century literature.
eighteenth-century novel.
f myth and history.
historiography.
history of women's writing.
literature.
romance.
women novelists.
women writers.
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc.
ISBN 9781442667396 (electronic bk.)
1442667397 (electronic bk.)
9781442647145
1442647140