Aphra Behn

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It is difficult to summarise AB 's immense and complex importance for the history of women's writing. Virginia Woolf said she deserved from all women a tribute of flowers because she was the first to bring together writing and earning. In fact only two professional (as opposed to amateur) dramatists of either sex (Dryden and Shadwell ) emerged before her on the Restoration stage. Theatrical writing (mostly comedy) supported her for the major part of her career as one of the period's most prolific and popular dramatists. Her poems and translations are also significant in the story of those genres. Later she pioneered the important new forms of novella and full-length epistolary novel. She exploited to the full a raunchy period during which social criticism clothed itself naturally in sex comedy; her gender made her a belated partaker in the academic rediscovery and rehabilitation of the Restoration age.

Milestones

14 December 1640

Eaffrey Johnson, born this day at Harbledown near Canterbury, was probably (not certainly) AB .
Todd, Janet. The Secret Life of Aphra Behn. Rutgers University Press.
14

24 March 1677

AB 's greatest stage success, The Rover; or, The Banish't Cavaliers (adapted from Thomas Killigrew ), had its probable opening at Dorset Garden .
The London Stage 1660-1800. Southern Illinois University Press.

1688

In this staggeringly productive last year AB published at least ten titles.
Todd, Janet. The Secret Life of Aphra Behn. Rutgers University Press.
512-13

By 13 June 1688

AB had probably completed her short novelOroonoko, or, The Royal Slave, which was published by William Canning that same year, with a dedication to the Jacobite Lord Lauderdale .
Todd, Janet. The Secret Life of Aphra Behn. Rutgers University Press.
417
O’Donnell, Mary Ann. Aphra Behn: An Annotated Bibliography of Primary and Secondary Sources. Garland.
137, 139

16 April 1689

AB died in London after years of poverty and illness.
Mendelson, Sara Heller. The Mental World of Stuart Women: Three Studies. Harvester Press.
182

8 March 1790

There opened at Drury Lane Theatre a comedy entitled Love in Many Masks, by John Philip Kemble , which was adapted from AB 's The Rover.
The London Stage 1660-1800. Southern Illinois University Press.
5: 1233
Critical Review. W. Simpkin and R. Marshall.
69 (1790): 593

Biography

Birth and Context

14 December 1640

Eaffrey Johnson, born this day at Harbledown near Canterbury, was probably (not certainly) AB .
Todd, Janet. The Secret Life of Aphra Behn. Rutgers University Press.
14