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The woman of colour anonymous
The woman of colour anonymous





the woman of colour anonymous

The meticulously annotated primary text and the supplemental material Dominique has selected to situate it within its cultural moment has the potential to fill in gaps in our understanding of literary history, expand our understanding of a specific cultural moment and struggle (namely England’s competing projects of abolition and empire), and provide an entry to heretofore marginalized (if not completely unknown) literary traditions, all the while highlighting previously ignored threads in existing ones. As Dominique convincingly argues, it extends the traditions introduced by Samuel Richardson in Pamela Or, Virtue Rewarded (1740). The novel fits neatly into that period between Frances Burney’s novels of the late eighteenth century and the historical novels of the Romantic era, and anticipates Bertha Mason in Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre (1847). Dominique’s edition of The Woman of Colour: A Tale (1808) has much to offer. For anyone interested in histories of prose fiction, Lyndon J. The allure of editing a text that has been out of print for two hundred years is irresistible to any scholar interested in lesser-known texts from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, especially a novel compelling enough to gain the notice of influential periodicals like The British Critic and The Monthly Review. The Woman of Colour: A Tale, by Anonymous, ed.







The woman of colour anonymous