Elliott, Grace. Journal of My Life during the French Revolution. Rodale Press, 1955.
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Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Leisure and Society | Grace Elliott | Under the rule of Napoleon
, both as consul and as emperor, says the editor of GE
's journal, she again moved in the higher circles. Elliott, Grace. Journal of My Life during the French Revolution. Rodale Press, 1955. 147 |
Literary responses | Penelope Fitzgerald | Publishers Weekly praised, as well as the mingling of irony and pathos in the novel's tone, its effortless presentation of abstruse research into daily life in Enlightenment-era Saxony, German reactions to the French Revolution... |
Literary responses | Sydney Owenson Lady Morgan | The virtues of this powerful Irish novel were not fully appreciated in England. Mary Russell Mitford
thought that Morgan would be all right without the politics: she would be worth reading and praising if only... |
Literary responses | Helen Maria Williams | Napoleon
himself read this book and was incensed. He accused HMW
of falsehood through his ghostwritten, posthumous Napoleon in Exile, 1822. Kennedy, Deborah. Helen Maria Williams and the Age of Revolution. Bucknell University Press, 2002. 183 |
Literary responses | Germaine de Staël | The book attracted attacks from Catholics and from specialists with more knowledge than GS
. One politician criticised her for attempting such a large topic, allegedly outside the realm of a woman's proper sphere. It... |
Literary responses | Germaine de Staël | Benjamin Constant
, formerly the lover of GS
, represented her in his novel Adolphe as a woman whose mind was the most wide-ranging of any woman ever, and perhaps of any man, qtd. in Kobak, Annette. “Mme de Staël and Fanny Burney”. The Burney Journal, Vol. 4 , 2001, pp. 12-35. 26 |
Literary responses | Jane Porter | JP
's use of historical figures and her descriptions of the Kościuszko Uprising of 1794 made many readers suppose that the first volume especially was history, not fiction. A friend of the family felt sure... |
Literary Setting | Anna Maria Porter | The novel is set in Europe during the Napoleon
ic era, only a few years in the past. Lingering fears of Napoleonic invasion made its subject highly topical for Porter's English readers. The brothers are... |
Literary Setting | Naomi Jacob | This novel encompasses three generations. Abraham Gollantz enters the story in Paris in the 1790s, having travelled from Rotterdam to learn the business of art dealing from Fernando Meldola, his father's oldest friend, an Italian... |
Literary Setting | Ann Jellicoe | This lively play deals with smuggling, farming, and carpet-making (an important local industry) in South Devon during the Napoleon
ic wars. AJ
enlisted the aid of the Exeter Folk Arts Workshop
to help weave traditional... |
Literary Setting | F. Tennyson Jesse | The heroine of this novel operates in male disguise in the exotic world of sea-rovers. The action involves the bloody rebellion of 1802 on San Domingo (now Haiti) when Napoleon
sent military force in an... |
Literary Setting | Jane Austen | This fragment depicts a seaside resort, often identified as Brighton, under development after Napoleon
's first defeat had freed the south coast from the threat of invasion, but before the war returned with his... |
Material Conditions of Writing | Carola Oman | CO
's one volume of straight history for adults was Britain Against Napoleon, a study—written at a moment when British military power stood alone against most of Europe—about another somewhat similar moment in the past. Oman, Carola. Britain Against Napoleon. Faber and Faber, 1942. prelims “Obituary: Miss Carola Oman”. Times, 12 June 1978, p. 16. 16 |
Material Conditions of Writing | Anna Letitia Barbauld | At this date, though the war against France was, from a British point of view, going well, Britain was suffering terribly from its prosecution. Napoleon
had not yet swung the balance against himself by invading... |
Occupation | Beryl Bainbridge | BB
was a striking and accomplished visual artist, though she tended to speak slightingly of her own work. Early in her marriage to Austin Davies she exhibited her work alongside his. King, Brendan. Beryl Bainbridge. Bloomsbury , 2016. 197 |
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