2015
DOI: 10.4324/9781315655666
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Ann Yearsley and Hannah More, Patronage and Poetry

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“…This state of affairs is particularly striking when compared with the Romantic period, where multiple women poets have received both critical editions and book‐length studies within the last 20 years, including the work of McCarthy (2008, 2019), Watkins (2012), and Clery (2017) on Anna Letitia Barbauld; Brewer (2009–10), Robinson (2011), and Cross (2016) on Mary Robinson; Barnard (2009), Kairoff (2011), and Moore (2015) on Anna Seward; Labbe (2003), Curran (2005–07), and Roberts (2019) on Charlotte Smith; and Andrews (2013, 2014) on Ann Yearsley. A full account of recent work on any of these writers (especially Smith, who is undoubtedly the best‐studied woman poet of the long eighteenth century) would require a dedicated survey.…”
Section: Surveying Recent Scholarshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This state of affairs is particularly striking when compared with the Romantic period, where multiple women poets have received both critical editions and book‐length studies within the last 20 years, including the work of McCarthy (2008, 2019), Watkins (2012), and Clery (2017) on Anna Letitia Barbauld; Brewer (2009–10), Robinson (2011), and Cross (2016) on Mary Robinson; Barnard (2009), Kairoff (2011), and Moore (2015) on Anna Seward; Labbe (2003), Curran (2005–07), and Roberts (2019) on Charlotte Smith; and Andrews (2013, 2014) on Ann Yearsley. A full account of recent work on any of these writers (especially Smith, who is undoubtedly the best‐studied woman poet of the long eighteenth century) would require a dedicated survey.…”
Section: Surveying Recent Scholarshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our understanding of literary sociability has been enhanced through research into coteries which included women poets, such as the heterosocial circles surrounding Aaron Hill (Gerrard, 2003;Wilputte, 2014) and Jonathan Swift (Backscheider, 2004;Gerrard, 2016). For some women poets, supportive literary networks could become sources of anxiety, competition, and resentment, where the lines between friendship and patronage were frequently blurred (Andrews, 2013;Beutner, 2011;Ezell, 2013;Mills, 2009). This interest in literary community has accompanied ongoing integrationist work which draws connections between women poets and 'canonical' male authors.…”
Section: Surveying Recent Scholarshipmentioning
confidence: 99%