The Delicate DistressUniversity Press of Kentucky, 1997 M04 17 - 267 páginas The Delicate Distress (1769) focuses on the problems women encounter after marriage - the issue of financial independence for wives, the consequences of interfaith relationships, and the promiscuity of their husbands. At the story's center is the deep distress of Emily Woodville, a virtuous young newlywed who suspects her husband of infidelity with a French marchioness from his past. Against a backdrop of rural England and Paris of the ancien regime, Elizabeth Griffith takes the epistolary novel of sensibility in the tradition of Samuel Richardson and Jean-Jacques Rousseau and re-imagines it from a feminist perspective that centers on strong, intelligent, and virtuous women. Two sisters exchange letters about urgent ethical questions concerning love, marriage, morality, art, the duties of wives and husbands, and passion versus reason, while two men correspond about the same subjects. The Delicate Distress is one of the earliest novels to explore the psychology of characters who observe and reflect but engage in no grand public actions. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 68
Página vii
... woman prepared to become merely a gentleman's mistress . Four subsequent volumes of Genuine Letters published after their marriage offered letters in which the two discussed their common reading , ideas about morality and the world ...
... woman prepared to become merely a gentleman's mistress . Four subsequent volumes of Genuine Letters published after their marriage offered letters in which the two discussed their common reading , ideas about morality and the world ...
Página viii
... scruples about the propriety of her translating the words of one of the most notorious French courtesans and female libertines of the late seven- teenth century . While it is surprising that a woman viii / INTRODUCTION.
... scruples about the propriety of her translating the words of one of the most notorious French courtesans and female libertines of the late seven- teenth century . While it is surprising that a woman viii / INTRODUCTION.
Página ix
... woman who in the Genuine Let- ters positions herself as an icon of morality and marital virtue would suddenly proffer cynical French libertinism , Richard was nevertheless correct in believing that there was a contemporary market for ...
... woman who in the Genuine Let- ters positions herself as an icon of morality and marital virtue would suddenly proffer cynical French libertinism , Richard was nevertheless correct in believing that there was a contemporary market for ...
Página x
... ro- mance of her husband that she forces a separation . While separated , she attempts to show that a married woman can have male friends , but the lesson of the play is that such platonic friendship is x / INTRODUCTION.
... ro- mance of her husband that she forces a separation . While separated , she attempts to show that a married woman can have male friends , but the lesson of the play is that such platonic friendship is x / INTRODUCTION.
Página xi
... woman relinquishes her demand for romance within marriage as an entitlement , her husband will give her romance , indeed , romantic adulation as a free gift . De- spite his initial resistance to Lady Frankland's demands for romance ...
... woman relinquishes her demand for romance within marriage as an entitlement , her husband will give her romance , indeed , romantic adulation as a free gift . De- spite his initial resistance to Lady Frankland's demands for romance ...
Contenido
Letters | 7 |
Letters | 123 |
A List of the Subscribers | 231 |
List of Emendations | 234 |
Explanatory Notes | 243 |
266 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
acquainted Adieu affection affectionate affliction amiable appeared beauty captain Barnard captain Beaumont Charlotte Charlotte's charming chearfulness convent daughter David Garrick dear Emily dear Fanny dear Woodville Delicate Distress Dublin Elizabeth Elizabeth Griffith endeavoured England epistolary novel eyes Fanny Weston father fear feel felt flatter fond fortune Gordian Knot grief Griffith happiness heart honour hope intreated knew lady Anne lady Harriet lady Lawson lady Ransford lady Somerville Lady STRAFFON lady Woodville London lord Seymour Lord WOODVILLE lord Woodville's Lucy madame de Beaumont mademoiselle marchioness marriage married melancholy mind misery nature never Ninon de L'Enclos novel Paris passion person pleasure present received Richard Richard Griffith seemed sensible sincerely Sir James Miller Sir James Thornton Sir John sister soon sorrow suffer surprized tears tenderness thing Thomas Arne thought told truly unhappy virtue wife wish woman women Woodfort wretched write young Your's