Mary Hays

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Standard Name: Hays, Mary
Birth Name: Mary Hays
Pseudonym: Eusebia
Pseudonym: M. H.
Pseudonym: A Woman
MH is one of the best-known among the group of radical feminists surrounding Mary Wollstonecraft; she is notable for arguing from emotion, even passion, as well as reason. She wrote two novels, poetry, and a number of polemical and biographical works.

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Literary responses Anne Grant
Letters from the Mountains was not noticed in the Edinburgh Review, an omission which Grant attributed to gender prejudice.
Perkins, Pamela. “Anne Grant and the Professionalization of Privacy”. Authorship, Commerce and the Public: Scenes of Writing, 1750-1850, edited by Emma Clery et al., Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 29-43.
32
The Critical gave it a brutal review, which began by turning seriously against the...
Literary responses Alicia Tyndal Palmer
William Gifford panned this novel in the Quarterly. He ridiculed ATP 's grasp of history and geography, and her overestimate of the cultural influence of English governesses. He presents the novel as a tedious...
Literary responses Elizabeth Hamilton
Alexander Hamilton in the Monthly Review felt it necessary to warn its readers that these letters were really a novel. It also judged the Indian sections far less well done than the English ones.
Griffiths, Ralph, and George Edward Griffiths, editors. Monthly Review. R. Griffiths.
n. ser. 21: 176
Literary responses Annabella Plumptre
The Critical Review thought it rather like Emma Courtney by Mary Hays (the subject of its previous notice) in its principles, and noted that The advocate for the female sex will approve it. The review...
Literary responses Jane West
The Critical Review was enthusiastic about A Gossip's Story, recommending it as an antidote to the pernicious maxims of most modern sentimental novels. The reviewer said that West's frequent touches of delicate humour came...
Literary responses Mary Wollstonecraft
The Vindication provoked a storm of comment and replies, in reviews (the Monthly was respectful both of her project and its execution, but the Critical, though its review was long and detailed, was scathingly...
Literary responses Eliza Fenwick
Secresy had six reviews in 1795; EF wrote much later that they blamed the principles but commended the style & Imagination.
Paul, Lissa. Eliza Fenwick, Early Modern Feminist. University of Delaware Press.
71
The Critical Review was put off by the title but then moved to...
Literary responses Charlotte Lennox
Among modern scholars, Duncan Isles called this the fullest and probably most reliable biography, and Susan Carlile regrets that it has not been more used.
Carlile, Susan. “Expanding the Feminine: Reconsidering Charlotte Lennox’s Age and <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl=‘m’>The Life of Harriot Stuart</span&gt”;. Eighteenth-Century Novel, edited by Albert J. Rivero and George Justice, Vol.
4
, pp. 103-37.
110
This year three magazines ran articles about CL (a...
Material Conditions of Writing Catharine Macaulay
CM thought of writing a history of the American War of Independence. According to Mary Hays in Female Biography, she possessed materials communicated to her by Washington himself, but that the decline in her...
names Mary Lamb
The pseudonym, not an obvious choice among classical womens' names, probably comes from a character in Mary Hays 's Letters and Essays, Moral and Miscellaneous, published by 1793.
Aaron, Jane. A Double Singleness. Clarendon Press; Oxford University Press.
52n2
Occupation Eliza Fenwick
EF wrote to Mary Hays that she was ensconced as a governess with the Mocattas at 33 Wyck Street in Chiswick, a Jewish family who had been bankers in London for close to two...
Occupation Elizabeth Strickland
ES duly began writing for children and editing a periodical, but this was a temporary measure. They formed the intention of publishing historical memoirs or biographies. (Both biography collections and the memoir as a new...
Other Life Event Mary Wollstonecraft
Response to her death began with Mary Hays 's passionate eulogy in the Monthly Magazine that very month.
Tomalin, Claire. The Life and Death of Mary Wollstonecraft. Penguin.
287
politics Eliza Fenwick
Fenwick's initial hatred of slavery lapsed into tolerance, in a society where slavery was woven into the fabric of life. She began hiring slaves, according to established practice, from owners who kept them for that...
Publishing Eliza Fenwick
EF 's letters to Mary Hays were edited (considerably revised, with significant passages omitted and some letters divided up) by Hays's great-great-niece Annie F. Wedd . These printed letters run from 22 October 1798 to...

Timeline

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