Morgan Rooney | Carleton University (original) (raw)
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Papers by Morgan Rooney
Lumen: Selected Proceedings from the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 2008
Acknowledgments Introduction: The French Revolution Debate, the Discourses of History, and the Br... more Acknowledgments Introduction: The French Revolution Debate, the Discourses of History, and the British Novel, 1790-1814 Part I: Reading History in a Revolutionary Age, 1789-1794 1. 1688 in the 1790s: Strategies for Interpreting the Glorious Revolution 2. The Presence of the Past: The Discourses of History Part II: Novel and History, 1793-1814 3. Order under Siege: The Discourses of History in the Anti-Jacobin Novel 4. The Crumbling (E)state: The Problem of History in the Novel of Reform 5. Representing History in a Post-Revolutionary Age: Varieties of Early Historical Fiction Bibliography Index About the Author
Journal of British Studies
that there was no set body of aristocratic suppliers in London as in Paris, and two houses less t... more that there was no set body of aristocratic suppliers in London as in Paris, and two houses less than twenty miles apart (Arbury and Stoneleigh) could have barely any suppliers in common, metropolitan or local.
Wordsworth Circle, Sep 22, 2012
Eighteenth-Century Studies, 2015
Eighteenth-Century Fiction, 2006
Sir Lionel Beacon's typically ironic comment on one of the two outcast daughters referred to in t... more Sir Lionel Beacon's typically ironic comment on one of the two outcast daughters referred to in the title of Mary Robinson's The Natural Daughter (1799)-lady Susan Sherville's illegitimate child Frances (or Fanny, as she is affectionately called)-is a provocative statement about the eighteenth-century script of femininity. The baronet's seemingly whimsical declaration provides a useful, flexible trope that can help to explain the nuances of Robinson's feminist thinking as it unfolds over the course of the novel. For, as I will demonstrate, Martha Morley of The Natural Daughter can be described as both "belonging to nobody" (because she has escaped the possessive grasp of a husband who conceives of women as the property of men) and as "belonging to nobody" (because she has refused the confines of an identity defined primarily by the body). Robinson presents a woman who doubly belongs to no/body as a legitimate, sustainable alternative to the suffocating scripts of illegitimacy and the fallen woman.
Lumen: Selected Proceedings from the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 2008
Acknowledgments Introduction: The French Revolution Debate, the Discourses of History, and the Br... more Acknowledgments Introduction: The French Revolution Debate, the Discourses of History, and the British Novel, 1790-1814 Part I: Reading History in a Revolutionary Age, 1789-1794 1. 1688 in the 1790s: Strategies for Interpreting the Glorious Revolution 2. The Presence of the Past: The Discourses of History Part II: Novel and History, 1793-1814 3. Order under Siege: The Discourses of History in the Anti-Jacobin Novel 4. The Crumbling (E)state: The Problem of History in the Novel of Reform 5. Representing History in a Post-Revolutionary Age: Varieties of Early Historical Fiction Bibliography Index About the Author
Journal of British Studies
that there was no set body of aristocratic suppliers in London as in Paris, and two houses less t... more that there was no set body of aristocratic suppliers in London as in Paris, and two houses less than twenty miles apart (Arbury and Stoneleigh) could have barely any suppliers in common, metropolitan or local.
Wordsworth Circle, Sep 22, 2012
Eighteenth-Century Studies, 2015
Eighteenth-Century Fiction, 2006
Sir Lionel Beacon's typically ironic comment on one of the two outcast daughters referred to in t... more Sir Lionel Beacon's typically ironic comment on one of the two outcast daughters referred to in the title of Mary Robinson's The Natural Daughter (1799)-lady Susan Sherville's illegitimate child Frances (or Fanny, as she is affectionately called)-is a provocative statement about the eighteenth-century script of femininity. The baronet's seemingly whimsical declaration provides a useful, flexible trope that can help to explain the nuances of Robinson's feminist thinking as it unfolds over the course of the novel. For, as I will demonstrate, Martha Morley of The Natural Daughter can be described as both "belonging to nobody" (because she has escaped the possessive grasp of a husband who conceives of women as the property of men) and as "belonging to nobody" (because she has refused the confines of an identity defined primarily by the body). Robinson presents a woman who doubly belongs to no/body as a legitimate, sustainable alternative to the suffocating scripts of illegitimacy and the fallen woman.