Marie-Antoinette, Queen of France

Standard Name: Marie-Antoinette,, Queen of France

Connections

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Textual Features Lucille Iremonger
It relates the story told in a book called An Adventure, 1911, by Charlotte Moberly and Eleanor Frances Jourdain , Principal and Deputy Principal of St Hugh's College (which LI herself had attended). In...
Textual Features Hélène Barcynska
The eponymous heroine of The Activities (officially named Lavinia but always called Lavie) is an American railroad heiress, whose father arranges for her to be introduced into English high society by Lady Loamington, who badly...
Textual Features Anna Seward
AS 's correspondence often deals with literary matters as well as with social matters and personalities. She writes with astonishing freedom to Hester Piozzi about the latter's travel book Observations and Reflections: not only...
Textual Features Hilary Mantel
Mantel's starting point was her choice, when invited to select a book as gift for a celebrity, of Caroline Weber 's Queen of Fashion: What Marie Antoinette Wore to the Revolution as a present for...
Textual Features Christina Stead
The protagonist couple in this novel are both US Communists in the 1940s. Stephen Howard is an Ivy-League-educated child of privilege; his wife, Emily Wilkes, who says she comes from Hix-on-the-Stix, is an exuberant...
Textual Features Rumer Godden
It is set in a Kashmir mountain village, where a young widow, Sophie, settles with her two children. Left short of money by her husband's death, she finds standard colonial life stultifying, feels that the...
Publishing Mary Hays
She was commissioned to produce this work for the occasion of Queen Caroline's trial, by the publishers T. and J. Allman . Its frontispiece shows Caroline flanked by portraits of Queen Elizabeth , but...
Publishing Margaret Holford
Probably a number of Holford's poems circulated in manuscript, as did one on a portrait of Marie Antoinette .
Baillie, Joanna. The Collected Letters of Joanna Baillie. Editor Slagle, Judith Bailey, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press.
2: 551-2
Joanna Baillie included this poem (which begins And this was she!) and another...
politics Grace Elliott
GE (who by her own account seldom missed a historic occasion) was present when Marie-Antoinette went to the theatre, the Comédie Italienne, with her two eldest children: her last public appearance before her execution.
Elliott, Grace. Journal of My Life during the French Revolution. Rodale Press.
39-41
Occupation Grace Elliott
Her biographers, indeed, wonder if she may have been a spy. She spoke to an agent of d'Orléans in Brussels; on a later visit she carried a letter there for Marie-Antoinette ; she may perhaps...
Material Conditions of Writing Germaine de Staël
Shocked by the Reign of Terror in France, GS from her exile in Switzerland published Réflexions sur le procès de la reine: a brave anonymous pamphlet pleading for the queen 's life.
Kobak, Annette. “Mme de Staël and Fanny Burney”. The Burney Journal, Vol.
4
, pp. 12-35.
25
Lonchamp, Frédéric-Charles. L’Œuvre Imprimé de Madame Germaine de Staël. Suisse.
14
Literary Setting Catherine Gore
The queen in question is Marie Antoinette ; the action takes place before and during the French Revolution, at the Trianon of Versailles and at a chateau near Epernay in Champagne.
Gore, Catherine. Gore on Stage: The Plays of Catherine Gore. Editor Franceschina, John, Garland.
159, 195
Leisure and Society Sarah Scott
Sarah belonged to a number of libraries, both the circulating and the subscription variety. She seldom missed a new publication either in English or French. She was more critical of what she read than was...
Intertextuality and Influence Rosina Bulwer Lytton, Baroness Lytton
The pamphlet takes the form of a letter to an unnamed man. Along with the particular example of her husband, it attacks the government of England: but how could this country be anything but the...
Intertextuality and Influence Mary Wollstonecraft
MW was replying to a number of authoritative male texts about the nature of women: by Burke (who in Reflections on the Revolution in France had glorified Marie-Antoinette and dismissed non-queenly femininity as animal), Rousseau

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