Highly respected as a writer by critics and commentators, Hesba Stretton (1832-1911) was a vigorous campaigner for the rights of oppressed minorities and a founding member of the London Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. Though she is known today primarily as a writer of evangelical fiction for young people, including "Jessica's First Prayer", this characterization fails to acknowledge the extensive range of her writings and social activism.Elaine Lomax re-examines Stretton's writing for children and adults, situating her body of work within the broad social and cultural context of its production to expose the depth and complexity of Stretton's engagement with contemporary ideas, debates, and discourses. Mining nineteenth-century periodicals, archival materials, and the minutes of the Religious Tract Society, as well as Stretton's own revealing log books, Lomax demonstrates Stretton's preoccupation with those at the bottom or on the margins of society. At the same time, she advances our understanding of the intersection of cultural and literary representations of the child and childhood with wider images of the colonised or excluded, and our knowledge of the history and development of juvenile literature and women's writing.
Author(s): Elaine Lomax
Year: 2009
Language: English
Pages: 252
Contents......Page 6
List of Figures......Page 7
Acknowledgements......Page 9
Introduction......Page 10
Part 1 Private and Public Lives; Writing and Reading Worlds......Page 24
1 Personal Writings, Published Texts, Biographical Perspectives......Page 26
2 Publishers, Writers, Readers and Responses......Page 58
Part 2 Roles, Representations and Social Relations......Page 88
3 The Child: Text, Context and Intertext......Page 90
4 ‘Worth her Weight in Gold’: Subtexts of Sexuality......Page 124
5 Versions of Womanhood: Perspectives on Motherhood and Gender......Page 144
6 Outcast Society and Society’s Outcasts......Page 174
7 Religion, Romance, Reform and Revolution: The Russian Connection......Page 212
Conclusion......Page 224
Bibliography......Page 228
Index......Page 244