Helen Thompson’s Ingenuous Subjection offers a new feminist history of the eighteenth-century domestic novel. By reading social contract theory alongside representations of the domestic sphere by authors such as Mary Astell, Mary Davys, Samuel Richardson, Eliza Haywood, and Frances Sheridan, Thompson shows how these writers confront women’s paradoxical status as both contractual agents and naturally subject wives. Over the long eighteenth century, Thompson argues, domestic novelists appropriated the standard of political modernity advanced by John Locke and others as a citizen’s free or 'ingenuous’ assent to the law. The domestic novel figures feminine political difference not as women’s deviation from an abstract universal but rather as their failure freely or ingenuously to submit to the power retained by Enlightenment husbands.
Ingenuous Subjection claims domestic novelists as vital participants in Enlightenment political discourse. By tracing the political, philosophical, and generic significance of feminine compliance, this book revises our literary historical account of the rise of the novel. Rather than imagining a realm of harmonious sentiment, domestic fiction represents the persistent arbitrariness of eighteenth-century men’s conjugal power. Ingenuous Subjection revises feminist theory and historiography, locating the genealogy of feminism in a contractual model of ingenuous assent which challenges the legitimacy of masculine conjugal government. The first study to treat feminine compliance as something other than a passive, politically neutral exercise, Ingenuous Subjection recovers in this practice the domestic novel’s critical engagement with the limits of Enlightenment modernity.
Spis treści
Introduction
PART I. INGENUOUS SUBJECTION AND FEMININE POLITICAL DIFFERENCE
1. Boys, Girls, and Wives: Post-Patriarchal Power and the Problem of Feminine Subjection
2. Mushrooms, Subjects, and Women: The Hobbesian Individual and the Domestic Novel
3. 'The Words Command and Obey’: Pamela and Domestic Modernity
PART II. INGENUOUS SUBJECTION AND THE NOVEL
4. Eliza Haywood’s Philosophical Career: Ingenuous Subjection and Moral Physiology
5. Charlotte Lennox and the Agency of Romance: Ingenuous Subjection and Genre
6. Frances Sheridan’s 'disingenuous girl’: Ingenuous Subjection and Epistolary Form
Conclusion: 'Marriage has bastilled me for life’: Mary Wollstonecraft’s Domestic Novel
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
O autorze
Helen Thompson is a member of the Department of English at Northwestern University.