Women’s Writing in the British Isles from the Beginnings to the Present
Harriet Martineau
-
Standard Name: Martineau, Harriet
Birth Name: Harriet Martineau
Pseudonym: Discipulus
Pseudonym: A Lady
Pseudonym: H. M.
Pseudonym: From the Mountain
Pseudonym: An Invalid
Pseudonym: An Englishwoman
HM
began her career as a professional writer, which spanned more than four decades in the mid nineteenth century, with writing from a Unitarian perspective on religious matters. She made her name with her multi-volume series (initially twenty-five volumes, followed by further series) of narrative expositions of political economy. One of the founders of sociology, who believed that social affairs proceed according to great general laws, no less than natural phenomena,
she produced several major contributions to this emerging field. She wrote broadly in periodicals and regularly for a newspaper on social and political issues, and produced three books of observations emerging from her foreign travels. Although her two three-volume novels were not particularly successful, her work had a great impact on later Victorian fiction. She also wrote history, biography, and household manuals. Her advocacy of mesmerism and her atheism made some of her later writings controversial. In her eminently readable autobiography and other writings she presents a cogent analysis of conditions shaping the lives of Victorian women. Although she became hugely influential—one of the most prominent women writers of her day—HM
eschewed notions of genius. Her crucial contribution to Victorian feminist thought has frequently been overlooked.
Chapman, Maria Weston, and Harriet Martineau. “Memorials of Harriet Martineau”. Harriet Martineau’s Autobiography, James R. Osgood, 1877, pp. 2: 131 - 596.
"Harriet Martineau" Retrieved from https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/9a/Harriet_Martineau_by_Richard_Evans.jpg/822px-Harriet_Martineau_by_Richard_Evans.jpg.
CB
visited Harriet Martineau
at her home The Knoll, in the Lake District, where she asked her host to mesmerize her.
Barker, Juliet. The Brontës. St Martin’s Press, 1994.
663-4
Friends, Associates
Charlotte Brontë
CB
saw a resemblance between Emily and both Gaskell and Harriet Martineau
, to whom she also had her publishers send a copy of Shirley.
Barker, Juliet. The Brontës. St Martin’s Press, 1994.
615
Gaskell, Elizabeth. The Life of Charlotte Brontë. Editor Shelston, Alan, Penguin, 1975.
392
Travel
Charlotte Brontë
Late in the year she refused a second invitation from Martineau
, but she did not accept it, bowing to the view of her father and friends that Martineau's atheism made a friendship between them inappropriate.
Barker, Juliet. The Brontës. St Martin’s Press, 1994.
709
Friends, Associates
Charlotte Brontë
Numerous friends and acquaintances of CB
wrote tributes or obituaries which initiated the legend of the Brontës and Charlotte in particular: Harriet Martineau
in the Daily News on April 6; Matthew Arnold
in a short...
Literary responses
Charlotte Brontë
Harriet Martineau
, finding the work attributed to herself even by members of her own family, felt that the unknown author must know not only my books but myself very well. . . . With...
Literary responses
Charlotte Brontë
Reviews of the novel were generally positive, though several remarked on a sense of bitterness about women's lot or found the representation of women inadequate. Harriet Martineau
's review in the Daily News criticized the...
Anthologization
Mary Ann Browne
Mary Anne Jevons
included three poems by MAB
in her little Liverpool publication The Sacred Offering. A Poetical Annual, 1834.
Jevons had launched this venture in 1831, and for the first two numbers all...
EBB
had showed a keen interest in women's issues from early in life, when she seems to have been for some time a devotee of Mary Wollstonecraft
. But she told Browning in 1845 that...
Textual Features
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
This powerful evocation of a female African-American slave, who challenges her pursuers and thereby forestalls her capture moments before she dies, draws on EBB
's awareness of the Barrett family's history as Jamaican slaveholders. A...
Literary responses
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
EBB
's ballads have proved of particular interest to feminist critics. Dorothy Mermin
argues that in this apparently most innocent, retrogressive, and sentimental of female genres, she was exploring what was to become her central...
Occupation
Robert Browning
RB
began his literary career as a poet inauspiciously with Pauline (1833), but with Paracelsus (1835) began to achieve some critical success. He entered literary society under the patronage of W. J. Fox
, and...
Leisure and Society
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Her bouts of ill-health often kept her in bed, where she had time to dedicate herself to reading and writing. It has been suggested, in fact, that the invalidism of nineteenth-century writers such as herself...
politics
Josephine Butler
An early action of the LNA was to publish their petition, or The Ladies' Appeal and Protest, in the Daily News in December 1869, following Harriet Martineau
's letters written as An Englishwoman which...
Chapman, Maria Weston, and Harriet Martineau. “Memorials of Harriet Martineau”. Harriet Martineau’s Autobiography, James R. Osgood, 1877, pp. 2: 131 - 596.
Martineau, Harriet. “Miss Martineau on Mesmerism”. Athenæum, No. 891-895, pp. 1070 - 1174 passim.
Martineau, Harriet. “On Female Education”. The Monthly Repository, Vol.
18
, pp. 77-81.
Martineau, Harriet. Poor Laws and Paupers Illustrated. Charles Fox, 1834, 4 vols.
Martineau, Harriet. Retrospect of Western Travel. Saunders and Otley, 1838, 3 vols.
Martineau, Harriet. Retrospect of Western Travel. Haskell House, 1969, 2 vols.