Eliza Haywood

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Standard Name: Haywood, Eliza
Birth Name: Elizabeth Fowler
Married Name: Eliza Haywood
Pseudonym: A Young Lady
Pseudonym: Mira
Pseudonym: Euphrosine
Pseudonym: The Authors of the Female Spectator
Pseudonym: The Author of the Fortunate Foundlings
Pseudonym: Exploralibus
Pseudonym: The Son of a Mandarin, residing in London
EH was the most prolific novelist by number of titles (even ignoring those doubtfully ascribed) between Aphra Behn and Charlotte Smith . She also wrote poems, plays, periodicals, conduct books, translation, and theatre history. Her output of 72 works and four collections (actual or planned) skews all graphs of the rising output of published works by women. Some readers find the endless, breathless sex scenes of her earlier fiction tedious; but behind the sensationalism is a sharp mind. She is hilariously satirical, pointedly topical, formally inventive and experimental, and trenchantly critical of power misused (in both political and gender relations). Her career shows a certain direction as well as a constant opportunism. The varied origins of the novel gave her scope for original hybridizations of the pliable new form. Her Betsy Thoughtless first brought to the post-Richardsonian novel a female viewpoint unmonitored by male mentors. Her Female Spectator was the first woman's work in the new magazine genre.

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Literary responses Susanna Haswell Rowson
The Critical Review situated this work in reference to two others: Sterne 's Sentimental Journey and Elizabeth Bonhote 's The Rambles of Mr. Frankly. (It apparently did not remember Eliza Haywood 's The Invisible...
Literary responses Sarah Chapone
SC 's friend and printer Richardson saw her project in a different and far more simple light than she did: as the administering by a good woman of an antidote to the Poison shed by...
Intertextuality and Influence Catherine Hutton
Jane Oakwood says (presumably standing in for her author, as she often does) that in youth she was accused of imitating Juliet, Lady Catesby (Frances Brooke 's translation from Marie-Jeanne Riccoboni ).
Hutton, Catherine. Oakwood Hall. Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown.
3: 95
Intertextuality and Influence Susan Smythies
The title-page bears a quotation from Prior 's verse romance Henry and Emma, but SS lays explicit claim, too, to a canonical tradition of prose fiction. The book begins with a series of tales...
Intertextuality and Influence Charlotte Lennox
The novel's opening is an early example of a technique which was to remain popular with authors for generations: About the middle of July 17 — . . . , where the precise day and...
Intertextuality and Influence Violet Trefusis
This work clearly follows in the tradition of the erotic, oriental, satirical novel Le Sopha, 1742, by the younger Crébillon .
Le Sopha was translated into English in the year of original publication by...
Intertextuality and Influence Delarivier Manley
The feminist revenge fantasy in The Wife's Resentment, of a woman executing rough justice on her upper-class betrayer, was tamed and sentimentalised by successors who included Eliza Haywood .
Donovan, Josephine. “From Avenger to Victim: Genealogy of a Renaissance Novella”. Tulsa Studies in Women’s Literature, Vol.
15
, No. 2, pp. 269-88.
280
Intertextuality and Influence Penelope Aubin
The moral aims of PA 's fiction are clear enough; critic Sarah Prescott , however, suggests that morality may have been less an impulse than a stock in trade.
Prescott, Sarah. “Penelope Aubin and The Doctrine of Morality: a reassessment of the pious woman novelist”. Women’s Writing, Vol.
1
, No. 1, pp. 99-112.
107
Aubin was also, unmistakably, one...
Intertextuality and Influence Aphra Behn
Nancy Copeland has observed in a recent study of Behn, Centlivre , and gender that adaptations of this play, by Eliza Haywood in A Wife to be Lett, 1723, and Hannah Cowley in A...
Intertextuality and Influence Lady Mary Wortley Montagu
The emotional outpouring of the early letters sounds unmediated; yet they are modelled on a style used in epistolary fiction by Behn and Haywood .
Intertextuality and Influence Sydney Owenson, Lady Morgan
She here turns to use some of the research she had done with the intention of writing a non-fictional study of Belgium (only recently constituted as a nation) and its politics, and a guide-book element...
Intertextuality and Influence Sarah Murray
The first anecdote about the girls is sentimental in tone. The sweet and lovely Miss Menil reforms the eleven-year-old malicious telltale Miss Cummings by taking her part when she has done wrong. Miss Cummings, filled...
Intertextuality and Influence Laetitia Pilkington
LP was vividly aware of the literary handicap represented by her gender. But she was choosy about claiming influence. She decried Manley , Haywood , and Mary Barber (whose poems, she says, would have been...
Intertextuality and Influence Frances Brooke
Mary Singleton, supposed author of this paper, with its trenchant comments on society and politics, is an unmarried woman on the verge of fifty,
McMullen, Lorraine. An Odd Attempt in a Woman: The Literary Life of Frances Brooke. University of British Columbia Press.
14
good-humoured as well as sharply intelligent: a contribution to the...
Friends, Associates Jonathan Swift
Swift helped and befriended a number of women writers. He was a patron of Mary Barber , Constantia Grierson , an unidentified Mrs Sican , Mary Davys , and Laetitia Pilkington , a colleague of...

Timeline

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Texts

Haywood, Eliza. The Husband. T. Gardner, 1756.
Haywood, Eliza. The Injur’d Husband. D. Browne, Jr.; W. Chetwood, and J. Woodman; S. Chapman, 1722.
Haywood, Eliza. The Invisible Spy. T. Gardner, 1754, http://HSS Special Collections.
Castera, Louis Adrien Duperron de. The Lady’s Philosopher’s Stone. Translator Haywood, Eliza, D. Browne, Jr., and S. Chapman, 1725.
Haywood, Eliza. The Mercenary Lover. N. Dobb, 1726.
Hatchett, William et al. The Opera of Operas. W. Rayner, 1733.
Haywood, Eliza. The Parrot. Thomas Edlin and James Roberts.
Haywood, Eliza. The Parrot. T. Gardner.
Haywood, Eliza. The Perplex’d Dutchess. J. Roberts, 1727.
Haywood, Eliza. The Rash Resolve. D. Browne, Jr., and S. Chapman, 1724.
Haywood, Eliza. The Secret History of the Present Intrigues of the Court of Caramania. Booksellers of London and Westminster, 1726.
Haywood, Eliza, and Christine Blouch. The Selected Works of Eliza Haywood. Editor Pettit, Alexander, Pickering and Chatto, 2000.
Haywood, Eliza. The Surprize. J. Roberts, 1724.
Haywood, Eliza. The Tea-Table. J. Roberts, 1725.
Haywood, Eliza. The Unequal Conflict. J. Walthoe and J. Crokatt, 1725.
Haywood, Eliza. The Wife. T. Gardner, 1756.
Haywood, Eliza. The Wife. T. Gardner, 1756, http://HSS Special Collections.
Haywood, Eliza. The Works of Mrs. Eliza Haywood. D. Browne Jr., and S. Chapman, 1724.
Haywood, Eliza. The Young Lady. T. Gardner.