Stephenson, Harold William. The Author of Nearer, My God, to Thee (Sarah Flower Adams). Lindsey Press.
17-20
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | Sarah Flower Adams | Her devout Unitarian
upbringing manifested itself in her writing, most explicitly in her hymns. Stephenson, Harold William. The Author of Nearer, My God, to Thee (Sarah Flower Adams). Lindsey Press. 17-20 Commire, Anne, and Deborah Klezmer, editors. Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia. Yorkin Publications. |
Textual Features | Sarah Flower Adams | In keeping with the Repository's Unitarian
philosophy, SFA
considered writing to be a means to social improvement, Todd, Janet, editor. Dictionary of British Women Writers. Routledge. Armstrong, Isobel et al., editors. Nineteenth-Century Women Poets. Clarendon Press. |
Publishing | Anna Letitia Barbauld | She wrote for other periodicals as well. From 1803 she reviewed poetry and belles lettres for the Annual Review, edited by her nephew Arthur Aikin
, though few of her contributions are identified. For... |
Cultural formation | Antoinette Brown Blackwell | In 1878 she returned to organized religion, joining a Unitarian Fellowship. Elizabeth Cazden
believes that ABB
was drawn to the Unitarian church
because it envisioned a benevolent God and defended human freedom and moral reasoning. Cazden, Elizabeth. Antoinette Brown Blackwell. Feminist Press. 190 |
Occupation | Antoinette Brown Blackwell | ABB
continued writing philosophy and participating in the suffrage movement well into her late eighties. By this time she was recognized by many as an accomplished philosophical writer, suffragist, and a preacher in the |
Cultural formation | Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon | She was not baptised, since her father regarded the ceremony as a mere unmeaning shibboleth. Her radical and Unitarian
family background encouraged her bent towards feminism and educational reform. She herself seems to have been... |
Cultural formation | Mary Carpenter | She belonged to the English middle class; her parents were members of the intellectual aristrocracy of English puritanism, as her father was a dissenting Unitarian
minister. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. |
politics | Laura Ormiston Chant | During one of her trans-Atlantic tours, in Spring 1893, LOC
addressed the Women's Era Club
, an African-American women's club located in Boston, Massachusetts, that promoted both racial equality and women's suffrage. There Chant... |
Cultural formation | Lydia Maria Child | She had a strong sense of her American identity, but in religion she was a seeker who found it hard to feel at home in any denomination. Rejecting the strict Calvinism in which she was... |
Anthologization | Frances Power Cobbe | |
Publishing | Frances Power Cobbe | |
Cultural formation | Sara Coleridge | |
Cultural formation | Eliza Cook | EC
was brought up as a respectable tradesman's daughter. Miles, Alfred H., editor. The Poets and the Poetry of the Century. Hutchinson. 271 |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Caroline Frances Cornwallis | The letters in Christian Sects (which is headed by three quotations, one of them from St John's Gospel) are said to have been exchanged between one of the editors of the Small Books, and... |
Cultural formation | Lucie Duff Gordon |
No bibliographical results available.