To the rescue!: A case study of the prefaces to late eighteenth-century children’s books

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    Abstract

    Within the context of the rise of domestic pedagogy, the approach made by women writers of children’s literature is a substantial contribution to the renowned debate on education, providing women educators with both domestic and literary authority. The traditional view is that these women were participating almost angelically in the educational development of their times; however, this position ignores the fact that these writers were, actually, commercially driven. Hence, their “Prefaces”, “Dedications”, “Addresses” or “Postscripts”, dedicated either to parents or to children, contain several ingenious strategies aimed at manipulating and convincing their audience to purchase their “products”. Therefore, this paper aims at studying the writers’ self-representation by looking at a series of books and their paratexts that were used to create support and help the writers advance their commercial objective. The paper focuses on the selected works of Letitia Barbauld, Ellenor Fenn, Sarah Trimmer, Maria Edgeworth, Mary Lamb and Jane West.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)286-300
    Number of pages15
    JournalEuropean Academic Research
    Volume1
    Issue number3
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2013

    Keywords

    • women writers
    • eighteenth-century children's literature
    • prefaces
    • commercial strategies
    • instruction and entertainment
    • literary market

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