Harriet Martineau

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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,
Martineau, Harriet, and Gaby Weiner. Harriet Martineau’s Autobiography. Virago, 1983, 2 vols.
2: 245
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.
572-3

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Intertextuality and Influence Elizabeth Gaskell
EG wrote Mary Barton following the death of her ten-month-old son in 1845. Johann Ludwig Uhland 's Auf der Überfahrt, from which she takes one of her epigraphs, refers to two from the spirit-land...
Intertextuality and Influence Sarah Austin
Harriet Martineau refers to SA 's essay in her influential article on Female Industry.
Martineau, Harriet. “Female Industry”. Criminals, Idiots, Women and Minors: Nineteenth-Century Writing by Women on Women, edited by Susan Hamilton, Broadview, 1995, pp. 29-73.
53
Intertextuality and Influence Millicent Garrett Fawcett
The book consists of four tales, dealing with free trade, foreign trade, money, and demand and supply. Fawcett's preface says: I cannot let them go to press without a word of apology to Miss Martineau
Leisure and Society Eliza Lynn Linton
In London, Eliza Lynn drank in artistic life. She championed the singing of Jenny Lind against those who preferred Alboni or Malibran. She performed for Samuel Laurence the role of uninformed art critic or foolometer...
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...
Literary responses Josephine Butler
Harriet Martineau , JB 's comrade and frequent collaborator in the struggle against the Contagious Diseases acts, considered this an epochal publication.
Chapman, Maria Weston, and Harriet Martineau. “Memorials of Harriet Martineau”. Harriet Martineau’s Autobiography, James R. Osgood, 1877, pp. 2: 131 - 596.
2: 591
The reviewer for The Shield praised the book in March 1871...
Literary responses Isabella Beeton
IB received an early letter of commendation from political economist Harriet Martineau , who had published books—such as Household Education—along the same lines. Although she disliked the sections on manners and (as a homeopath)...
Literary responses Hannah More
Sarah Harriet Burney had high praise for it. The chapter on the smaller-scale faults and virtues, she said, merits to be written in letters of gold.
Burney, Sarah Harriet. The Letters of Sarah Harriet Burney. Editor Clark, Lorna J., University of Georgia Press, 1997.
139
Around the same time Harriet Martineau (in her...
Literary responses George Henry Lewes
A hostile notice by T. H. Huxley in the Westminster Review (owned by John Chapman ) dismissed Lewes as an amateur and ranked his book below Harriet Martineau 's recent abridgement of Comte. George Eliot
Literary responses Evelyn Sharp
Beverly Lyon Clark , who wrote an introduction to this book and thought extremely highly of it, argued that the neglect of it stemmed from its belonging not just to one but to several under-appreciated...
Literary responses Mary Delany
Harriet Martineau nevertheless fastened with delight on the primary material here. She found the first three volumes an enormous treat,—perhaps the greatest in the book way for these seven years, and counted on the second...
Literary responses Anna Brownell Jameson
Reviewers noted the fact that it was a woman who had set out on this bold journey. Christian Isobel Johnstone 's review in Tait's Edinburgh Magazine was fairly typical in suggesting that that Winter Studies...
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 Elizabeth Sewell
Her autobiography has received the most recent critical attention of her writings. Critic Valerie Sanders compares it with other autobiographies (by Harriet Martineau , Fanny Kemble and Margaret Oliphant ), and notes ES 's conflicted...
Literary responses Anna Brownell Jameson
Critic Katharine Patterson has constructed a database mapping through letters ABJ 's connections to many of her contemporaries, including Harriet Martineau .
Patterson, Katharine Bassett. “Anna Jameson, Harriet Martineau, and Their Friends”. Simon Fraser University Library: Electronic Document Centre: Victorian Women Writers’ Letters Project.

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