Celestina

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Broadview Press, 2004 M10 25 - 603 páginas

Published here for the first time in a modern edition, Charlotte Smith’s third novel is both rivetingly plotted and unique for its time in its powerful depiction of a gifted Romantic woman poet. The novel’s heroine, Celestina, abandoned as a child in a French convent, becomes an independent, witty, and accomplished elegiac poet who, in a reversal of the usual pattern of the courtship novel, acts as a mentor to several men in her life. Written at the beginning of the French Revolution, Smith’s novel depicts characters challenging both corrupt authority and conventional morality, exemplifying her hope that English society was on the verge of a great change for the better.

This Broadview edition includes a critical introduction and primary source material relating to the novel’s reception, its political contexts (writings by Reverend Richard Price, Edmund Burke, Mary Wollstonecraft, and Thomas Paine), and the author’s life.

 

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Contenido

Acknowledgements
7
Introduction
9
A Brief Chronology
45
A Note on the Text
51
CELESTINA
53
The Reception and Influence of Celestina
543
The Political Context
555
Charlotte Smiths Life
569
Select Bibliography
601
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Acerca del autor (2004)

Loraine Fletcher is Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Reading. She is the author of Charlotte Smith: A Critical Biography (Macmillan, 1998) and the editor of Charlotte Smith’s Emmeline (Broadview Press, 2003).

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