Heineman, Helen. Mrs. Trollope: The Triumphant Feminine in the Nineteenth Century. Ohio University Press.
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Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
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Cultural formation | Frances Trollope | FT
belonged to an English professional family and was likely white; her mother came from a well-to-do Derbyshire family, and her father, the son of a Bristol saddler, was an Anglican
clergyman. Heineman, Helen. Mrs. Trollope: The Triumphant Feminine in the Nineteenth Century. Ohio University Press. 4 |
Cultural formation | Frances Trollope | FT
's opinion that church services should not be sensational foreshadows her famously strong reaction to what she perceived as the uncouth manners of Americans. One of her biographers writes that she was always specially... |
Textual Features | Frances Trollope | FT
was a strong believer in established religion, and as she had frowned upon English practices antithetical to the Church of England
, so too she found American religious pluralism unsettling. In one anecdote, she... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Frances Trollope | This novel is long on moral exposition and extended discussions between characters over various threats to the Church of England
and its flock, but its plot is weak and derivative. Walter's bright, morally upstanding niece... |
Cultural formation | Joanna Trollope | JT
grew up as a member of the English professional class and of the Church of England
. |
Cultural formation | Sarah Trimmer | Born into the English professional class, she was a fevent Anglican
, godly from her childhood onwards. Feminist Companion Archive. |
Textual Production | Sarah Trimmer | ST
sought and received support from the Church of England
and the from Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, or SPCK
. Staves, Susan. “Church of England Clergy and Women Writers”. Reconsidering the Bluestockings, edited by Nicole Pohl and Betty Schellenberg, Huntington Library, pp. 81-103. 87 |
Textual Production | Sarah Trimmer | The full title was A Comparative View of the New Plan of Education promulgated by Mr. Joseph Lancaster, in his Tracts concerning the Instruction of the Children of the Labouring Part of the Community; and... |
Literary responses | Sarah Trimmer | The Critical Review gave her the last paragraph only of a review chiefly concerned with two books on related topics by male authors, one of which was Lancaster
's Improvements in Education, which the... |
Textual Production | Sarah Trimmer | ST
published A Companion to the Book of Common Prayer of the Church of England, which she followed with little books explaining, respectively, the sacraments of public baptism and of confirmation. The Critical of... |
Cultural formation | Melesina Trench | She was born into the Anglo-Irish upper middle class, with dignitaries in the Church of Ireland
on both sides of her family, whose origin was French Huguenot. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Melesina Trench | The title poem of Ellen comes from a story lately reported by newspapers. Other pieces (several of them ballads) deal with historical figures like Queen Elizabeth
, Cardinal Wolsey
, an anonymous monk, and the... |
Textual Production | Rebecca Travers | She spelled her name Rebecka on the former of these, but in its more conventional form on the other. The former title continues: Of That Eternal Breath begotten and brought forth not of flesh &... |
Cultural formation | Catharine Parr Traill | |
Cultural formation | Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna | Her upbringing in a professional, Tory, English family was surprisingly unconventional: she was encouraged to roam freely with her brother, to read widely . . . and forbidden to wear restrictive clothing. Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford. |
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