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Anne
K. Mellor, Mothers of the Nation: Women's Political Writing in England, 1780-1830. 2nd
ed. Bloomington: Indiana
UP, 2002. 172pp. $39.95/$17.95. (Hdbk; ISBN: 0253337135, Pbk; ISBN: 025321369X).
Bibliographic
Citation: Zimmerman,
Sarah M. "On
Anne K. Mellor, Mothers
of the Nation: Women's
Political Writing
in England, 1780-1830." [date
of access]. Romantic
Circles Reviews 8.2
(2005): 11 pars.
May 2006. <http://www.rc.umd.edu/reviews/mellor_w06.html>.
Table
of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Women and the Public Sphere in England, 1780-1830
1. Hannah More, Revolutionary Reformer
2. Theater as the School of Virtue
3. Women's Political Poetry
4. Literary Criticism, Cultural Authority and the Rise of the Novel
5. The Politics of Fiction,
Desmond
Persuasion
Notes
Postscript: The Politics of Modernity
Notes
Works Cited
Index
Reviewed by
Sarah M. Zimmerman
Fordham University
-
Anne
Mellor's latest book
brings to bear on the
field of British Romantic
women's writing recent
debates about women
and the public sphere.
She invokes two pervasive
critical accounts:
Jürgen
Habermas's theory of
the emergence of a "bourgeois
public sphere" in
eighteenth century Europe,
and feminist narratives
of the development of
gendered "separate
spheres" that
culminated in the
Victorian ideal of
a domesticated womanhood.
These historical paradigms
do not readily map
onto one another (chronologically,
geographically, or
theoretically), yet
both accounts rehearse
the rise of a predominantly
masculine realm of
public debate and discursive
exchange. Mellor challenges
both models, finding
Habermas's "conceptual
limitation" of
the public sphere
to propertied men "historically
incorrect" (2),
and "the
theoretical paradigm
of 'the doctrine
of the separate
spheres'" limiting
for our understanding
of the period's
lived experience
and literary
culture (7).
-
Mellor's
study participates
in
a broader rethinking
of these models by
social
and literary historians.
Linda Colley, Amanda
Vickery, and Lawrence
Klein, among others,
have
critiqued accounts
of
women's increasing
confinement
within domestic space,
while historians such
as Dena Goodman and
John
Brewer have suggested
that the era was defined
not by hardening distinctions
between public and
private
experience, but rather
by the very instability
of these categories.
Brewer argues that
public
authority gradually
managed
to "colonize" the
private realm; Mellor
claims the opposite.
She posits that active,
influential women promoted
the "values" of
a feminized private
sphere—"moral
virtue and an ethic
of care"—so
successfully that,
by
the end of the Romantic
period, only a monarch
who seemed to embody
moral rectitude and
domestic
stability was acceptable
to the English public.
Mellor credits women
debaters, preachers,
philanthropists, rulers,
and especially writers
with authoring a "transformation" in "public
opinion" and "political
culture" that
rendered the fiscal
and domestic excesses
of George IV increasingly
unacceptable and
paved the way for
the chaste figure
of Victoria (11-12,
38). In her "Introduction:
Women and the Public
Sphere in England,
1780-1830," Mellor
eschews the paradigm
of a separate, "counter
public sphere" for
women and claims
for them instead "an
enormous—and
hitherto largely
uncredited—impact
on the formation
of public
opinion in
England between
1780 and
1830" (11).
-
While
I welcome Mellor's
bold
thesis, in what follows
I question her reluctance
to qualify it. The
sweeping
transformation she
calls
for in how we view
Romantic
women writers may,
however,
seem to require such
decisive critical gestures.
Mellor successfully
champions
a bracing shift in
perspective
that moves these writers
to the center of Romantic
England's literary
and
political culture.
We
may no longer speak
of
them as "marginal," but
Mellor goes considerably
further in claiming
that they were instead
influential players
in turbulent scenes
of social change. Mellor
herself laid the groundwork
for this case in Romanticism
and Gender (1993),
where she argued
that
Romantic women writers "promoted
a politics of gradual
rather than violent
social change, a social
change that extends
the values of domesticity
into the public realm" (3).
In Mothers
of the Nation, she
follows these
writers
into the world
of print and
theater,
demonstrating
how "[w]omen
writers' words
and ideas were
disseminated orally
as well as in print" (4).
-
For
Mellor, Hannah More
plays
a key role in the social,
cultural, and political
transformation that
heralded
Victorian Britain by
envisioning "women's public role
as mothers of the
nation" (30).
More is introduced as
a "revolutionary
reformer" in
Chapter 1, and her
centrality to the
study is reinforced
by her reappearance
in subsequent chapters
on women playwrights
(Ch. 2) and poets
(Ch. 3). Mellor makes
two large claims about
More that undergird
the entire study:
that she was "the
most influential woman
living in England
in the Romantic era," and
that she helped to
prevent "a
French-style, violent
revolution in England," fostering
instead her "revolution
in manners" (13,
14, 18). Mellor
recounts More's
multi-faceted
program
of reproving aristocratic
decadence, promoting
an Evangelical
revival within
the Church of England,
and dangling the
carrot
of middle-class
prosperity to
workers to be pious
and industrious.
According
to More, the "behavior" of
women of all
ranks was key
to the nation's
reformation,
although upper-
and middle-class
women were to
assume particularly
prominent social
roles as philanthropists.
More, who "insisted
on the innate
difference between
the sexes," credited
women with
possessing
the qualities
requisite for
social renovation
that she envisioned:
sensibility
and, "above
all, a greater
moral purity
and capacity
for virtue" (26).
These qualities,
however, had
to be developed.
For
More, women's
education should
foster their
facility
at managing
their households'
moral, spiritual,
and fiscal economy—and
thus to make
them exemplars
for how to
run the nation's
domestic
economy.
-
More
reappears as an influential
figure in Chapter 2,
which treats "Theater
as the School of Virtue," along
with Joanna Baillie,
Hannah Cowley, and Elizabeth
Inchbald. Mellor argues
that each of these writers
viewed the theater "a
public school for females" (40)
that could produce
a "new
woman" who
was "rational,
compassionate,
merciful,
tolerant, and peace-loving" (38).
Mellor's treatment
of Baillie exemplifies
both the power
of the study's
broader thesis
and what is compromised
by an unwillingness
to qualify it.
Mellor offers Plays
on the Passions as
an influential
interjection
of (private)
emotion into
the public arena
of the theater
(42). Mellor's
reading of Count
Basil is
one of the
study's
strongest,
both for
its sheer
vitality
as an interpretation
and for
the convincing
way in which
it links
literary
form (dramatic
character
and plot)
to her broader
historical
thesis.
She considers
the play
as a critique
of a masculine
public realm
embodied
by the Duke
and Count
Basil. The
Count is
brought
down not
by his (heterosexual)
love for
Victoria,
nor by his
(homosocial)
attachment
to his soldiers
but rather
by "the
dominating
passion" of
the masculine
public sphere: "an
egotistical
self-love
that seeks
only its personal
aggrandizement" (44).
-
Mellor's
reading of Baillie's "Introductory
Discourse" to
the Plays is
less convincing
because
it allows neither
for the dramas'
fascination
with extreme emotion
nor our desire to
witness
it. Mellor reads
Baillie
as promoting "a
rational control
of passion that produces
harmonious and loving
family relationships." This
portrait of emotionally
regulated family
life is to serve,
in turn, as a "model
for peaceful national
and international
relations" (42).
Certainly, Baillie
asserts the beneficial
nature of her
theatrical investigation
of strong emotion,
but it is possible
to read the "Discourse" more
as a proleptic
defense
of—rather
than a straightforward
agenda for—her
excavation
of intense feeling.
By the same
token, Mellor
regards Baillie's
emphasis upon
the audience's "sympathetic
curiosity" as
the pedagogical
vehicle for
the plays' tempering
of emotion's
potential
destructiveness.
But Baillie's
treatment of
this capacity
allows ample
room for auditors'
voyeuristic
fascination
with persons
under duress,
especially
when she suggests
a comparison
between theater
audiences and
the crowds who
gather
to witness
public executions.
Mellor does
not concede
that Baillie's
treatment of
a natural "curiosity" with
human behavior
that she
dates from
childhood
may be understood
apart from
a reforming
impulse.
-
In
Chapter 3, on "Women's
Political Poetry," Mellor
identifies a Romantic "tradition
of the female poet," whom
she distinguishes
from the "the
poetess," a
figure previously
defined by Mellor
and other feminist
critics (70). In
contrast to "the
poetess," who
works within
a separate, women's
tradition that
celebrates the "domestic
affections," even
as her poetry
may subtly subvert
convention,
the
work of the "female
poet" is "explicitly
political" (70).
Under this
heading Mellor
brings together
Hannah More,
Charlotte
Smith,
Helen Maria
Williams,
Anna Letitia
Barbauld,
and Lucy
Aiken. Mellor
argues that
these poets
found enabling
precursors
in a tradition
of female
preachers
and prophets
who, in turn,
drew their
authority
to speak in
public from "seventeenth-century
Quaker theology
and a belief
in a divine
inner light" (70).
Mellor's
argument
is refreshing
for demonstrating
that Romantic
women poets
found grounds
for asserting
their cultural
authority
well beyond
the bounds
of literary
history.
This
argument
is especially
illuminating
for poets
such as
Anna Letitia
Barbauld
who were
steeped
in traditions
of Dissent.
For Charlotte
Smith,
however,
the paradigm
of the "female
poet" is
a less
comfortable
fit.
Certainly,
Smith "intended
to sway
public
opinion" (84),
but
unlike
the "female
poet," who "insisted
she
spoke
on
behalf
of
Virtue" (71),
Smith
simply
insisted.
Her
disregard
for
conventional
piety
was
a
lightening
rod
for
the
Tory,
High
Church British
Critic who
accused
her
of
presuming
that
she
could
find
God
in
nature,
beyond
the
Church's
institutional
edifices.
-
Chapter
4, "Literary Criticism, Cultural Authority, and the Rise of the Novel," makes one of the study's most valuable contributions, by conceiving a Romantic school of literary criticism by women that competes with the prevailing paradigm of their male peers, who (in Mellor's estimate) emphasize the imagination, language, transcendence, the visionary, and subjectivity. Mellor thus expands her claims for Romantic women writers' influence in the public sphere by gathering a handful of critics— Joanna Baillie, Anna Barbauld, Elizabeth Inchbald, Clara Reeve, Anna Seward, and Mary Wollstonecraft—who "set
themselves up as judges, judges
not just of aesthetic
taste and literary excellence
but also of cultural
morality" (100). Mellor credits these critics with championing a didactic literature that promoted "virtue, thrift, and self-control" and punished "willful impulse, irrationality, lack of foresight, excessive sensibility, and uncontrolled sexual desire" (89). In her account, they accordingly elevated the novel over lyric poetry in the hierarchy of genres for its pedagogical possibilities, preferring the novel as "the most moral and the most realistic" literary
form (95).
-
Mellor's
final chapter—"The
Politics of Fiction" (Ch.
5)—develops
her account of the
novel's potential as
a vehicle for social
reform. Taking Charlotte
Smith's Desmond and
Jane Austen's Persuasion as
her primary examples,
she argues that some
of the period's women
novelists "used
their fiction to promote
radical changes in Britain's
legal system of governance,
both at home and abroad" (104).
While Desmond launches
a comprehensive critique
of patriarchy that encompasses
the compromised roles
of women under English
law and in France's new
Republic, Persuasion offers
an alternative future
in Anne Elliot, who "comes
to embody Jane Austen's
concept of the new mother
of the nation" (131).
Mellor reads Austen's
protagonist as "the
visible embodiment of
Britannia herself," and
thus the novel as contributing
to "a
moment in which British
national identity is reconfigured
as feminine" (139).
Mellor concludes this
argument with a suggestive
reading of a contemporaneous
change in British coinage—the
appearance of Britannia
on the British copper
penny—as
heralding Victoria's
ascent to the throne.
-
Mellor's
study is a corrective,
not only to theories
of a "bourgeois
public sphere" and "separate
spheres," but
also to what she characterizes
as a liberal bias among
social historians emerging
from a Marxist tradition
and some feminist literary
critics who deplore the
brand of social change
championed most effectively
by More. Mellor is correct
in arguing that to dismiss,
according to a narrow
definition of activism,
the influence of women
who participated in conservative
social movements is to
distort significantly
our understanding of the
period. Throughout the
study, Mellor is careful
to acknowledge the ideological
implications of the social
and aesthetic views that
she identifies with this
tradition of Romantic
women's writing: Hannah
More "strongly
believed in economic stratification" (24)
and promoted a "Christian
capitalism" that
exploited workers (33).
In addition, the works
of "the
female Christian poet" were
likely to "co-opted
in the name of British
imperial expansion" (72)
and were often characterized
by a "Eurocentric
assumption" that
Christianity is "superior" to
other religions (77).
-
Thus
Mellor's study—having made the broader correction—lays
the groundwork for assessing
the field of Romantic
women's writing that
she outlines. Critics
will want to question
the coherence of the
program of the women
writers she brings together
under the rubric of
a determination to shape
public opinion and define
literary culture. Critics
will also want to measure
the extent to which
these writers' works
manifest the social
and aesthetic agendas
that they profess. Mellor's
study, however, makes
it impossible to overlook
the importance of these
women writers' reforming
zeal for the period's
literary, social, and
political culture.
Romantic
Circles Reviews
Editors,
Jeffrey N. Cox & Charles
Snodgrass
Associate
Editor, Jeffrey Ritchie
Review
published: March 2006.
Romantic
Circles
- Reviews -
Winter 2006 - Anne K. Mellor, Mothers of the Nation: Women's Political Writing in England, 1780-1830
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