Victorian writer Frances Trollope has largely been relegated to
a mere footnote in literary history as simply the mother of
Anthony. Equally unfortunate is that, aside from her nonfiction
work "Domestic Manners of the Americans," her 34 novels have been
out of print since the nineteenth century. She was, nonetheless,
the most provocative female writer of the early Victorian period
who used the novel to impel social change. She has been credited
for writing the first anti-slavery novel that predates "Uncle ToM's
Cabin," along with a number of works that incited reform
legislation regarding bastardy clauses, poor laws, and labor
conditions.
Expert contributors examine her life and writings, her social
activism, and the impact of her works. The book includes
discussions of her influence on Anthony Trollope, the rivalry
between Frances Trollope and Charles Dickens, her belief in the
power of female friendship, her ambivalence toward the ability of
women to effect social change, her thoughts on Evangelicalism, her
views on women and aging, and her innovative contribution to early
crime fiction. Contributors argue for the value of reprinting her
novels and travel books and point to her enduring literary
legacy.
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