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Authorship, Commerce, and Gender in Early Eighteenth-Century England
A Culture of Paper Credit
The contemporaneous development of speculative investment and the novel in the early eighteenth century, and women's role in both.
Catherine Ingrassia (Author)
9780521630634, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 5 November 1998
244 pages, 2 b/w illus.
23.6 x 16.1 x 2 cm, 0.465 kg
"Catherine Ingrassia's book will probably be more satisfying to those readers who equate the 'culture' of its title with popular print representation. I offer this review as an extremely satisfied reader who sees Commerce and Gender as one more good reason why it is productive, in attempting to reconstruct early modern history, to make this equation...Ingrassia enables our thinking of gender as a term central to how the English understood and represented economic and social changes." Albion
Speculative investment and the popular novel can be seen as analogous in the early eighteenth century in offering new forms of 'paper credit'; and in both, women - who invested enthusiastically in financial schemes, and were significant producers and consumers of novels - played an essential role. Examining women's participation in the South Sea Bubble and the representations of investors and stockjobbers as 'feminized', Catherine Ingrassia discusses the connection between the cultural resistance to speculative finance and hostility to the similarly 'feminized' professional writers that Alexander Pope depicts in The Dunciad. Focusing on Eliza Haywood, and also on her male contemporaries Pope and Samuel Richardson, Ingrassia goes on to illustrate how new financial and fictional models offered important models for women's social, sexual, and economic interaction.
Acknowledgements
Introduction: paper credit
1. Women, credit and the South Sea Bubble
2. Pope, gender, and the commerce of culture
3. Eliza Haywood and the culture of professional authorship
4. The (gender) politics of the literary marketplace
5. Samuel Richardson and the domestication of paper credit
Conclusion: negotiable paper
Notes
Index
Bibliography.
Subject Areas: Literary studies: c 1500 to c 1800 [DSBD]