Drawing on the history of English feminism and the study of
Victorian periodical and newspaper presses, this important and
timely new book asks a key question that neither history nor
literary studies has yet addressed: what did it mean to have a
Victorian feminist write for an established newspaper or
periodical? Using the example of Frances Power Cobbe (one of a
handful of women to make a steady living for the mid-nineteenth
century established press), Susan Hamilton opens up our
understanding of Victorian feminism and its political workings, and
urges us to reconsider what feminism looked like in the
nineteenth-century.
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