Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £33.47 GBP
Regular price £36.99 GBP Sale price £33.47 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead

The Politics of Motherhood
British Writing and Culture, 1680–1760

An examination of the eighteenth-century social and cultural struggle to develop new ideas for virtuous motherhood.

Toni Bowers (Author)

9780521020336, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 26 September 2005

280 pages, 13 b/w illus.
23.3 x 15.5 x 1.5 cm, 0.392 kg

Through detailed examination of a wide variety of novels, plays, sermons, songs, popular engravings, portraiture, and propaganda from the period, Toni Bowers examines the eighteenth-century struggle to develop new ideals for virtuous womanhood. She shows how popular representations of mothers codified and enforced a model of motherhood naturally and inevitably, removed from participation in the public world, and presented other ideals as monstrous. At the same time, she points out, some of the most influential texts resisted the newly reduced vision of maternal excellence by imagining alternatives to domesticity and dependence. Addressing broader social and cultural issues, and drawing radical comparisons between past and present, Bowers argues that Western culture continues to be limited by its commitment to the contradictory maternal ideals established in eighteenth-century discourse.

Introduction: historicising motherhood
Part I. Royal Motherhood: Queen Anne and the Politics of Maternal Representation: 1. 'The teeming Princess of Denmark': Anne as mother, 1684–1700
2. 'Thy nursing mother': symbolic maternity and royal authority at the coronation of Queen Anne
3. Symbolic maternity and practical politics in Queen Anne's England
Part II. Monstrous Motherhood: Violence, Difference, and the Subversion of Maternal Ideals: 4. 'Unnatural' motherhood in two novels by Daniel Defoe
5. Dreams of maternal autonomy: scandalous motherhood in three tales by Eliza Haywood
6. Maternal failure and socio-economic difference: the unnatural mother
Part III. Domestic Motherhood: Constraint, Complicity, and the Failure of Maternal Authority: 7. Female virtue and maternal authority in Pamela, Part 2
8. Maternal virtue and maternal failure in Clarissa
Conclusion: going public: the case of Lady Sarah Pennington
Appendix.

Subject Areas: Literary studies: c 1500 to c 1800 [DSBD]

View full details