1st Edition

Written Maternal Authority and Eighteenth-Century Education in Britain Educating by the Book

By Rebecca Davies Copyright 2014

    Examining writing for and about education in the period from 1740 to 1820, Rebecca Davies’s book plots the formation of a written paradigm of maternal education that associates maternity with educational authority. Examining novels, fiction for children, conduct literature and educative and political tracts by Samuel Richardson, Sarah Fielding, Mary Wollstonecraft, Maria Edgeworth, Ann Martin Taylor and Jane Austen, Davies identifies an authoritative feminine educational voice. She shows how the function of the discourse of maternal authority is modified in different genres, arguing that both the female writers and the fictional mothers adopt maternal authority and produce their own formulations of ideal educational methods. The location of idealised maternity for women, Davies proposes, is in the act of writing educational discourse rather than in the physical performance of the maternal role. Her book contextualizes the development of a written discourse of maternal education that emerged in the enlightenment period and explores the empowerment achieved by women writing within this discourse, albeit through a notion of authority that is circumscribed by the 'rules' of a discipline.

    Acknowledgments; Introduction; Chapter 1 Samuel Richardson’s Novelistic Maternity; Chapter 2 Sarah Fielding’s Narrative Maternity; Chapter 3 Mary Wollstonecraft’s Political Maternity; Chapter 4 Maria Edgeworth’s Empirical Maternity; Chapter 5 Ann Martin Taylor’s Dissenting Maternity; Chapter 6 Jane Austen’s Didactic Maternity; Conclusion;

    Biography

    Rebecca Davies is a Visiting Lecturer in Eighteenth-Century Literature at Loughborough University.

    'This study makes a bona fide contribution to our knowledge of pre-Golden Age children's literature ... of value for children's literature specialists ...' Children's Literature Association Quarterly