Prodigal Daughters: Susanna Rowson's Early American Women
Susanna Rowson--novelist, actress, playwright, poet, school founder, and early national celebrity--bears little resemblance to the title character in her most famous creation, Charlotte Temple. Yet this best-selling novel has long been perceived as the prime exemplar of female passivity and subjugation in the early Republic. Marion Rust disrupts this view by placing the novel in the context of Rowson's life and other writings. Rust shows how an early form of American sentimentalism mediated the constantly shifting balance between autonomy and submission that is key to understanding both Rowson's work and the lives of early American women.

Rust proposes that Rowson found a wide female audience in the young Republic because she articulated meaningful female agency without sacrificing accountability to authority, a particularly useful skill in a nation that idealized womanhood while denying women the most basic rights. Rowson, herself an expert at personal reinvention, invited her readers, theatrical audiences, and students to value carefully crafted female self-presentation as an instrument for the attainment of greater influence. Prodigal Daughters demonstrates some of the ways in which literature and lived experience overlapped, especially for women trying to find room for themselves in an increasingly hostile public arena.
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Prodigal Daughters: Susanna Rowson's Early American Women
Susanna Rowson--novelist, actress, playwright, poet, school founder, and early national celebrity--bears little resemblance to the title character in her most famous creation, Charlotte Temple. Yet this best-selling novel has long been perceived as the prime exemplar of female passivity and subjugation in the early Republic. Marion Rust disrupts this view by placing the novel in the context of Rowson's life and other writings. Rust shows how an early form of American sentimentalism mediated the constantly shifting balance between autonomy and submission that is key to understanding both Rowson's work and the lives of early American women.

Rust proposes that Rowson found a wide female audience in the young Republic because she articulated meaningful female agency without sacrificing accountability to authority, a particularly useful skill in a nation that idealized womanhood while denying women the most basic rights. Rowson, herself an expert at personal reinvention, invited her readers, theatrical audiences, and students to value carefully crafted female self-presentation as an instrument for the attainment of greater influence. Prodigal Daughters demonstrates some of the ways in which literature and lived experience overlapped, especially for women trying to find room for themselves in an increasingly hostile public arena.
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Prodigal Daughters: Susanna Rowson's Early American Women

Prodigal Daughters: Susanna Rowson's Early American Women

by Marion Rust
Prodigal Daughters: Susanna Rowson's Early American Women

Prodigal Daughters: Susanna Rowson's Early American Women

by Marion Rust

eBook

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Overview

Susanna Rowson--novelist, actress, playwright, poet, school founder, and early national celebrity--bears little resemblance to the title character in her most famous creation, Charlotte Temple. Yet this best-selling novel has long been perceived as the prime exemplar of female passivity and subjugation in the early Republic. Marion Rust disrupts this view by placing the novel in the context of Rowson's life and other writings. Rust shows how an early form of American sentimentalism mediated the constantly shifting balance between autonomy and submission that is key to understanding both Rowson's work and the lives of early American women.

Rust proposes that Rowson found a wide female audience in the young Republic because she articulated meaningful female agency without sacrificing accountability to authority, a particularly useful skill in a nation that idealized womanhood while denying women the most basic rights. Rowson, herself an expert at personal reinvention, invited her readers, theatrical audiences, and students to value carefully crafted female self-presentation as an instrument for the attainment of greater influence. Prodigal Daughters demonstrates some of the ways in which literature and lived experience overlapped, especially for women trying to find room for themselves in an increasingly hostile public arena.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807838815
Publisher: Omohundro Institute and UNC Press
Publication date: 12/01/2012
Series: Published by the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture and the University of North Carolina Press
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 328
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Marion Rust is assistant professor of English at the University of Kentucky.

Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments
List of Illustrations
Introduction: "What Thinks Your Father of the Present Times?"
Chapter One: What's Wrong with Charlotte Temple?
Chapter Two: Representing Rowson
Chapter Three: Feel Write
Chapter Four: Daughters of America
Chapter Five: Novel Schoolrooms
Index

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

A major accomplishment. . . . Rust charts the tension between discipline and pleasure, submission and autonomy, republican virtue and its gendered performances, that marked both Rowson and her characters, making them central to the culture of sentiment in the United States. By moving Rowson center stage, Prodigal Daughters rectifies a long-standing omission in American cultural history.—Laura Rigal, University of Iowa

More than a revisionist account of the best-selling novelist in the United States prior to Harriet Beecher Stowe, Rust's powerful rendering of Susanna Rowson's life and career is an invitation to rethink our fundamental assumptions about the relations among gender, agency, literary production, and public action.—Bruce Burgett, University of Washington

In this important contribution to gender and literary studies in the early U.S. Republic, Marion Rust opens a window onto the extended literary career of Susanna Rowson, demonstrating that there is far more to Rowson's work than Charlotte Temple and far more to the story of femininity in the early national period than a choice between seduction and death or republican motherhood.—Elizabeth Maddock Dillon, Northeastern University

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