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THE
NOVEL AS
POLITICAL
MARKER
Women Writers and their Female
Audiences in the Hookham and Carpenter Archives, 1791–1798
Rita J. Kurtz and
Jennifer L. Womer
I
The booksellers of Hookham and Carpenter (hereafter
referred to only as ‘Hookham’) were located on New
Bond Street in London, and their records span the most politically
turbulent decade of the eighteenth-centurythe 1790s. Clients
who frequented Hookham were primarily from the aristocratic
or gentry classes. In fact, of Hookham’s total buyers,
22% were aristocracy and 35% (214 customers) of the aristocracy
purchased novels. [1]
We can also confidently assume that untitled female customers
were of gentry income, because their addresses were primarily
in London’s fashionable ‘West End’.
Hookham’s
ledgers not only reveal a dramatic increase in the proportion
of female purchasers of novels by comparison to earlier studies
of provincial women, but they also reveal a remarkable increase
in the proportion of female purchases of novels authored
by females. [2]
Such a marked increase illustrates that Hookham’s leisured
female customers were able to buy more novels. Furthermore,
the fact that these female aristocrats and gentry have accounts
under their own name, not their husbands’, demonstrates
the greater degree of agency and independence that these urban,
moneyed women had relative to provincial women. However, because
our study does not include an examination of male customers,
we are very limited in what claims we can make about whether
or not these women behaved according to the cliché that
women were the predominant consumers of novels in the eighteenth-century.
Moreover, while
more disposable income and leisure time certainly accounts for
the significant increase in female purchases of novels authored
by women in the 1790s, this increase also strongly suggests
a desire on the part of women readers to engage in this politically
charged decade. Thus, novel-reading provided women readers with
the means through which they were able to participate in the
male-dominated world of politics. The latter part of our paper
will more fully explore this hypothesis in the context of certain
recent literary scholars’ claims that both Gothic and
sentimental novels are actively engaged in political debate
and discussion.
While the results
of our study of the Hookham archives disclose much interesting
evidence about female readership in the 1790s, it is important
to state that such evidence must be carefully and cautiously
interpreted and that there are certainly limitations to our
research. First, it must be pointed out that a female’s
purchase of a novel does not necessarily mean that she, in fact,
read the novel or that she bought it solely for herself. Furthermore,
our investigation of the ledgers is limited to the ‘F
Ledger;’ thus, neither ‘G Ledger’ nor the
‘Petty Ledger G’ was examined. [3]
Also, we did not include all novels written or
published by women in the 1790s. We limited ourselves to a finite
set of authors, specifically Ann Radcliffe, Charlotte Smith,
and Mary Robinson (see ‘Table 1’ in the Appendix
for a list of book titles for each author). Thus, the conclusions
we draw are based solely on the purchases of novels by Radcliffe,
Smith, and Robinson.
Our study of
the Hookham ‘F Ledger’ archives reveals that the
bookseller kept records for 984 customers (male and female)
between the years 1791 and 1798. These customers represent both
the aristocratic and gentry classes, who had enough disposable
income and leisure time to frequent this stylish New Bond Street
bookseller and purchase and then read novels. Of Hookham’s
984 customers, 478 are female; thus, women represent 48.6% of
Hookham’s total customers. An average of 42.5% more women,
therefore, frequented Hookham’s bookstore when contrasted
to both the Clay and Stevens total percentage of female provincial
customers (9.5% and 2.6%, respectively). [4]
Furthermore, 77 of Hookham’s female clients purchased
novels authored by women; in other words, 16% of Hookham’s
female customers bought novels written by Radcliffe, Smith,
or Robinson.
Such numbers
take on even greater significance when related to the figures
in Fergus’s earlier study (see Table 2 in Appendix). Although
the Stevens records are incomplete, they span a period of time
(1780 to 1806) that is comparable to Hookham’s 1790s records.
The Stevens records show that 4 out its 15 female customers
purchased novels authored by women. While this number reflects
27% of the total number of Stevens’s female clients, a
seemingly large number when compared to Hookham’s 16%,
one must keep in mind that Stevens’s total female clientele
was only 15, while Hookham had 478 female customers. Thus, the
fact that 16% of Hookham’s total female customers purchased
novels authored by three pre-eminent authors is quite remarkable.
The Hookham archives not only reveal an increase in female participation
in the book-buying marketplace, but they also reveal a marked
interest in female-authored novels by female customers relative
to what the Stevens records reveal.
Although the
Clay records span an earlier period of time than Hookham’s
and are thus less comparable, the results also reveal a dramatic
increase in female activity in the book trade and the purchase
of female-authored novels by female customers. For example,
the Clay records (including Warwick County and the Rugby schoolboys)
reveal that only 257 of Clay’s 2,700 total customers were
women. Women represent only 9.5% of Clay’s total customers
relative to Hookham’s 48.6%. Furthermore, just 11 of Clay’s
257 female customers bought female-authored books. In other
words, only 4.3% of Clay’s female customers purchased
novels by women. In contrast, 77 of Hookham’s 478 female
customers purchased female-authored novels, accounting for 16%
of Hookham’s total female customers. Similar to results
of the comparison made between the Stevens and Hookham records,
Hookham’s female customers again show a marked increase
not only in buying books in general, but also in their purchases
of novels authored by women in relation to the provincial women
of the Clay records. Indeed, Hookham’s privileged, city-dwelling
female customers of the 1790s were much more interested in both
buying novels and in consuming novels written by women than
their provincial counterparts of earlier and comparable decades.
Our general findings
include some interesting details about the three pre-eminent
authors of our study: Ann Radcliffe, Charlotte Smith, and Mary
Robinson (see Figure 1 in the Appendix). It is interesting to
point out the surprising popularity of Charlotte Smith, especially
because Hookham was only a retailer of her works and
the lack of popularity of Mary Robinson, who employed Hookham
in the earlier part of her publishing career but abandoned him
later. Our research also discloses that Hookham’s leisured
and moneyed female customers had a decisively keen interest
in the novels authored by Ann Radcliffe and Charlotte Smith.
These women purchased a total of 70 novels authored by Radcliffe
and a total of 48 novels authored by Charlotte Smith. One clear
trend of our study was that if a female customer bought Radcliffe,
then she also bought Smith, and vice versa. Furthermore, our
results confirm that the demand for novels by these two authors
was consistently high over the entire decade, with novels such
as Radcliffe’s The Romance of the Forest, The
Mysteries of Udolpho, and The Sicilian and Smith’s
The Banished Man having the greatest popularity.
The following
case studies offer a relatively accurate representation of the
majority of female customers who were inclined to purchase fiction
by writers such as Ann Radcliffe, Charlotte Smith, and Mary
Robinson (see Table 3 in the Appendix). As these case studies
show, we have selected women whose appetite for novels range
from picky and limited to voracious and vast.
Thirty-seven
percent (37%) of these four women’s total purchases were
novels authored by women. Three out of our four case studies
purchased at least five novels by women over the span of 1792
to 1798. Only Mrs Harriet Gardiner, the youngest daughter of
the Reverend Sir Richard Wrottesley, of Wrottesley, and sister
of the Duchess of Grafton, purchased one female-authored novel,
which was Mary Robinson’s Vancenza (2 vols, 1792).
Vancenza was a novel the Monthly Review ‘predict[ed]
will be much read and admired’ for its ‘richness
of fancy and of language’. [5]
Mrs Gardiner
shared an account with her husband William Gardiner, minister
plenipotentiary at Warsaw. At the time the Gardiners opened
their account with Hookham, Gardiner held the rank of Colonel
and was stationed at home. On January 5, 1792, Gardiner was
rewarded for his ‘zeal and assiduity’ and was promoted
and transferred to Warsaw, leaving his wife, son, and four daughters
in England. Their son Charles, Major 60th foot, followed in
his father’s military footsteps.
Interestingly,
Vancenza was purchased on February 8, 1792, a little
over one month after Colonel Gardiner’s departure. Despite
their shared account, it is safe to claim that Mrs Gardiner
purchased Robinson’s novel. Not until 1797 did Mrs Gardiner
purchase from Hookham another piece of literature. Instead of
a second novel, she purchased a play: Elizabeth Inchbald’s
Wives as They Were and Maids as They Are; a Comedy in Five
Acts. Like Vancenza, this drama was purchased
the same year it was published. In 1794, Mrs Gardiner took interest
in Hugh Blair’s Sermons, a collection of sermons
apparently published once a year. This is the only purchase
of a religious nature.
Biographical
information on Colonel Gardiner strongly suggests he was rarely,
if ever, home during the years this record accounts for. The
ledgers also suggest this is likely due to the fact that Army
Lists were purchased consistently from 1793 to 1798, with the
exception of 1795. On 21 September 1798, Mrs Gardiner purchased
Army Lists for January through September, plus two appendices.
On that same day, Mrs Gardiner also purchased issues of the
Fashionable Magazine spanning from March through September.
The Fashionable Magazine, however, did not become a staple
in Mrs Gardiner’s reading diet until March of 1798, when
she often purchased more than one copy at a time, perhaps for
one of her daughters. Prior to 1798, the Lady’s Magazine
was purchased in 1793, and pocket books for both ‘Ladies’
and ‘Gentlemen’ were bought in 1795, 1796, and 1797.
Clearly, Mrs Gardiner preferred to consume her fiction bought
from Hookham through magazines rather than novels.
It is not unreasonable
to hypothesise that many of the magazine and pocket book purchases
were for the Gardiner children because the remaining transactions
worth noting are books for children. These include: Pasquin’s
Treatise on the Game of Cribbage (1791) in 1794, The
Triumph of Reason in 1795, probably volume three
of a conduct book published in 1791, Chambaud’s The
Treasure of the French and English Languages (1786) in November
of 1795, and January of 1796, Hoyle’s Games Improved
(1796) in 1796, Chambaud’s Fables (1797) for children
in 1797, and Pratt’s Pity’s Gift: A Collection
of Interesting Tales, to Excite the Compassion of Youth for
the Animal Creation, Ornamented with Vignettes (1798) in
1798.
Like Mrs Gardiner,
the Marchioness of Downshire also purchased books for children,
as well as a novel by Mary Robinson. Unlike Mrs Gardiner, however,
the Marchioness was a voracious reader of fiction, buying a
total of eighteen novels over a five-year period. Out of these
eighteen novels, women composed all but four. The extent to
which the Marchioness’s class contributed to her inclination
for buying novels, as compared to Mrs Gardiner, is hard to ascertain.
However, the Marchioness of Downshire, or Mary Sandys, was very
wealthy when she married and enjoyed two-thirds of the income
of the Downshire estate until her death. Mary Sandys married
Arthur Hill in June 1786, 2nd Marquis of Downshire and son of
Wills Hill, a statesman famous for restoring the great St Malachy’s
Church of Ireland in 1774.
In 1792, the
Marchioness made four purchases, three of which were novels.
On 1 February, she purchased Ann Radcliffe’s A Sicilian
Romance (2 vols, 1790). On 8 February only seven days later,
the Marchioness returned to Hookham to purchase Radcliffe’s
1791 The Romance of the Forest. Radcliffe did not publish
again until 1794 with The Mysteries of Udolpho. Interestingly,
the Marchioness did not purchase this novel from Hookham, nor
did she purchase a single piece of fiction in 1793 or 1794.
However, she returned to Radcliffe in 1796, purchasing The
Italian. Although The Italian’s publication
date is officially 1797, two thousand copies were printed in
1796. Knowing that the Marchioness purchased one of the first
available copies of this novel confirms her fondness for reading
Radcliffe. The Monthly and Critical Reviews strongly
suggest that the Marchioness’s fondness for Radcliffe
was not out of the ordinary among readers of fiction. Both reviews
praise Radcliffe for her ability to ‘very skilfully […]
hold the reader’s curiosity in suspense, and at the same
time to keep his feelings in a state of perpetual agitation
[…] we have seldom met with a fiction which has more
forcibly fixed the attention, or more agreeably interested the
feelings, throughout the whole narrative’ (EN1, 1791:
58). Similarly, the reviewer in the Monthly believes
Radcliffe’s talent for exhibiting ‘Romantic scenes,
and surprising events […] elegant and animated language’
to be a marker of her popularity in the literary community of
writers and readers (EN1, 1790: 61).
The majority
of the Marchioness’s novel and drama purchases were made
in the year in which they were published, suggesting she had
an awareness of the literary marketplace. For example, in 1796,
her most aggressive year of buying, the Marchioness made a total
of 18 purchases from Hookham, ranging from ‘sundries’
to an almanac to political miscellanies to poetry to novels.
Of these 18 purchases, 12 were novels and 6 were published in
1796. Five of the remaining 6 were published either in 1795,
or were 1797 early releases. Only The Invisible Spy (2
vols) by Eliza Fowler Haywood was published considerably
earlier in 1755. Also, women wrote 10 out of these 12 novels.
Bought in this order, these include: Eliza Parson’s The
Mysterious Warning, a German Tale (4 vols, 1796), Elizabeth
Inchbald’s Nature and Art (2 vols, 1796), Lady
Mary Champion de Crespigny’s The Pavillion (4 vols,
1796), Eliza Fowler Haywood’s The Invisible Spy
(2 vols, 1793), Mary Robinson’s Angelina (3 vols,
1796), Sarah Burney’s Clarentine (3 vols, 1796),
Regina Maria Roche’s Children of the Abbey, a Tale
(4 vols, 1796), Jane West’s A Gossip’s Story,
and a Legendary Tale (2 vols, 1796), Isabella Kelly’s
The Abbey of Saint Asaph (3 vols, 1795), and Ann Radcliffe’s
The Italian (3 vols, 1796).
What is both
fascinating and noteworthy about this combination of purchases
has to do with the fact that several of these novels (excluding
Nature and Art, A Gossip’s Story, Abbey
of Saint Asaph, and The Italian) were regarded
by contemporary critics as unoriginal (see EN1, 1796: 35), a
faulty representation of high life (EN1, 1796: 35), lacking
‘any moral or religious truth’ (EN1, 1796: 27),
and ‘somewhat too romantic’ for ‘our female
readers’ (EN1, 1796: 78). The Marchioness’s purchases
reveal that she had no reservations about indulging her own
pleasures when it came to her choice of reading material, since
she frequently experimented with fiction that was deemed less
acceptable as well as with fiction that was popularly acclaimed,
like Radcliffe’s.
Interestingly,
in 1796 the Marchioness purchased two novels by men, one of
which was returned within a month of its purchase. This was
Herman of Unna (3 vols, 1794) by Christiane Benedicte
Eugenie Naubert. The other male-authored novel she purchased
was Edward: Various Views of Human Nature, Taken from Life
and Manners, Chiefly in England (3 vols, 1796) by John Moore,
a notorious reformer, especially after his first novel Zeluco
(1786), which was his most popular and controversial book. Many
critics contend the novel is little more than a fictionalised
reworking of some of the material in his travel books, offering
yet another account of society and manners in various European
countries. Like Zeluco, Edward was applauded for
its ‘series of conversation-pieces, exhibiting sketches
of real life and manners’ (EN1, 1796: 67). For a brief
period in 1795 (March and April), the Marchioness steadily bought
plays by Richard Cumberland, an author like Moore who was renowned
for his sketches of ‘real life’, only Cumberland’s,
as recorded by the Critical Review imitates Fielding
in ‘several scenes of low life […] and has taken
occasion to introduce a sarcastic fling at his most sentimental
rival, Richardson’ (EN1, 1795: 17). On 18 March 1795,
she purchased his novel, Henry (4 vols, 1795). On 6 April,
she bought his play Wheel of Fortune, a Comedy (1795)
and returned the very next day to purchase his other 1795 play,
The Jew, a Comedy. But this is the last trace of Cumberland
on the Marchioness’s record.
Like the Marchioness
of Downshire, Maria Lady Vanneck, daughter of Andrew Thompson,
of Roehampton, Surrey, and wife of ‘one of the richest
merchants in Europe’, Sir Joshua Vanneck, was also attracted
to novels by women, particularly Ann Radcliffe. Of the six novels
she purchased from Hookham, five were by women, and four were
by Ann Radcliffe. Although the majority of other genres she
purchasededucation, children’s books, reference,
and historywere authored by men, Lady Vanneck preferred
her fiction to be written by women.
Novel-reading
was at its height for Lady Vanneck in 1793. On 22 May 1793,
she purchased and had bound all of the novels published up to
this point in history by Ann Radcliffe: The Sicilian Romance
(2 vols, 1790), The Romance of the Forest (3 vols,
1791), and The Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne (1789).
In 1794 Radcliffe published The Mysteries of Udolpho
(4 vols) and sure enough, Lady Vanneck purchased it that same
year. Unfortunately, Lady Vanneck’s account ends in 1795,
just before Sir Joshua Vanneck is made a peer of Ireland in
1796, strongly suggesting that the Vannecks, including their
two daughters, Maria and Caroline, moved to Ireland. As a result,
although likely, we do not know if Lady Vanneck sought out The
Italian when it was initially published in 1796.
The two other
novels Lady Vanneck bought from Hookham were Richard Cumberland’s
Henry in 1795, also purchased by the Marchioness of Downshire,
and The Old Manor House (4 vols, 1793) in 1793 by Charlotte
Smith, a novel the Monthly Review commended for its ‘successful
imitations of the ordinary language of people in different classes
of the inferior ranks’, like Fielding (EN1, 1793: 39).
One of the most prolific writers of the 1790s, between 1787
and 1795 (Lady Vanneck’s record ends 1795) Smith published
nine novels; in total (178798) she published eleven. For
Lady Vanneck, Smith seems to have been forgotten after she had
a taste of Radcliffe’s tantalising gothic novels, although
as always, Lady Vanneck could have obtained these works from
other booksellers.
For the Dowager
Duchess of Leinster, however, Charlotte Smith was the authoress
of choice, purchasing eight of Smith’s novels between
1792 and 1797. The Dowager Duchess, Lady Emilia Mary Lennox,
was the second daughter of Charles, second Duke of Richmond.
She married her first husband James Fitzgerald, first Duke of
Leinster in 1747. Leaving four sons, the Duke died in November
1773. In 1774 the Dowager Duchess married William Ogilvie who
had served as her son Edward’s tutor. Not unlike the characters
of Smith’s novels, or Smith herself, the Dowager Duchess
aroused public interest by her marriage to Ogilvie.
Smith’s
novels make up more than 53% of the Dowager Duchess’s
total novel purchases. In all, she purchased fifteen, three
by male authors, and twelve by female authors, eight of which
were by Smith. In 1792, Smith published Desmond (3 vols)
and the Dowager Duchess purchased it that same year in August;
she also had it half bound. The following month, she purchased
an earlier work by Smith, Ethelinde, or the Recluse of the
Lake (5 vols, 1789). Ethelinde was not received as
well as Smith’s other novels or poetry because, as believed
by the Monthly Review, Smith did not exhibit the ‘knowledge
of men and manners’ (EN1, 1789: 68). In 1793, the Dowager
Duchess made one purchase in total with Hookham: Smith’s
most recent work of that year, The Old Manor House (4
vols, 1793). The following year, 1794, the Dowager Duchess was
most persistent in her reading of Smith. In March she bought
two more copies of Old Manor House and the ‘not
only interesting but instructive’ (EN1, 1794: 53) The
Wanderings of Warwick published in 1794, which she also
had bound. In September she bought and bound The Banished
Man (4 vols), also published in 1794. The Dowager Duchess
did not buy Smith’s Montalbert of 1795, at least
not from Hookham. She did however, purchase Smith’s 1796
novel Marchmont in December of that yearrecognised
as Smith’s autobiographical novel, of which the Monthly
Review lamented that ‘even in this land of comparable
freedom, similar acts of cruelty and injustice not only may
be but actually are perpetrated’ (EN1, 1796:
82). Her account ends in 1797, and after Marchmont, Smith
does not publish her final novel, The Young Philosopher,
until 1798.
On two occasions
in 1794 and 1796, the Dowager Duchess purchased both Smith and
Radcliffe. Of Radcliffe she bought The Mysteries of Udolpho
and The Italian. Like two of the women already discussed,
the Dowager Duchess also read novels by Cumberland in this order:
Henry (4 vols, 1795) and Arundel (2 vols, 1789).
The only other male novelist of interest to the Dowager Duchess
was Thomas Holcroft, who published Anna St. Ives (7 vols)
in 1792, a fiction denounced by the Critical Review as
a story which proposes doctrines demanding the ‘severest
reprehension’ (EN1, 1792: 38).
Lastly, the Dowager
Duchess was also keen on poetry, predominantly by men. For example,
in 1794 and in the same month that she bought The Mysteries
of Udolpho, she purchased The Works of Ossian, the Son
of Fingal by James Macpherson. Also, in June of 1794 she
bought Poems on Several Occasions by James Beattie as
well as two religious works and a cookbook. Not until 1797 does
the Dowager Duchess return to poetry, selecting Geoffrey Chaucer’s
Canterbury Tales. Comprised of both poetry and fiction,
Catherine Talbot’s Essays on Various Subjects was
bought in April of 1794. One other reference to a purchase of
‘poems’ is noted on the ledger; however we are unable
to identify this purchase.
Doubtless Mrs
Gardiner, the Marchioness, Lady Vanneck, and the Dowager Duchess,
as with all of Hookham’s aristocratic and gentry female
customers, certainly had more leisure time, more disposable
income, and easier access to novels relative to the women of
the provinces; yet, might there be another reason women were
suddenly so engaged in female-authored novels in the 1790s?
Was novel reading simply a passive exercise for womena
way in which to escape from, or fantasise their way out of,
the assumed monotony of their genteel existence? Does increased
production during this period and thus easier accessibility
the only other way to account for this activity? Or, because
women were excluded from the public or political sphere, might
novel reading provide them with a venue through which they could
participate in politics?
As Jacqueline
Howard asserts, ‘it must have been difficult for readers
and writers of the 1790s to engage with literature independently
of an awareness of contemporary, possibly subversive ideologies’,
especially in light of opposed public opinion on the events
in France and the culture of suspicion that intensified after
England declared war. [6]
According to Howard, novel writing and reading and the sphere
of politics are not, and can never be, mutually exclusive. Yet,
as Margaret Anne Doody points out in The True Story of the
Novel, eighteenth-century culture had a large stake in ‘feminising’
the novel; the cultural myth that only women read novels ‘is
reassuring’ because women ‘are theoretically disabled
from bringing concepts into social currency’. [7]
Thus, the novel is relegated to the private or domestic sphere,
in which it, like women, is rendered impotent as far as England’s
politics are concerned.
But, as Doody
also so astutely points out, ‘the private always is the
public in the Novel’; the novel’s ‘home and
its women (the angel in the house included) […] touch
[…] multiple aspects of the community, culture, and history’.
[8]
Simply stated, novel reading is an activity that interacts with
the social world; the political is not the sole domain of men,
for it cannot be contained by the same ideological border that
the patriarchy attempts to impose between the private and the
public sphere.
In light of the
fact that novel reading is always already a political and social
act, we would like to offer an additional explanation to account
for the substantial increase in the female purchase of novels
authored by women in the 1790s: Hookham’s female customers
were joining in the highly charged political debates of the
time through reading novels, namely, the implicitly political
novels of Radcliffe (seventy purchases) and the overtly political
novels of Smith (forty-eight purchases), the most consistently
popular authors bought by women throughout the decade, as previously
stated. In fact, Hookham’s female customers, with their
fashionable London addresses, were closer to the centres of
power and to the political activity than their provincial counterparts.
Many of these women’s husbands were members of Parliament,
and so they were at least very closely associated with, if not
fully participating in, exclusive circles of power.
Furthermore,
prominent radical discourses like those of William Godwin, Mary
Wollstonecraft, and Mary Hays fuelled the political climate
of the 1790s and were often exploited in magazines, newspapers,
and journals. [9]
For these thinkers the French Revolution of 1789 symbolised
‘the dawning of a new age of liberalism and egalitarianism’.
[10]
The political, social, and philosophical ideologies associated
with such radicalism of writers like these, as well as Thomas
Paine, Thomas Holcroft, Elizabeth Inchbald, and William Blake
were most likely accessible to female readers/subscribers of
various newspapers and magazines, and it is quite possible that
female readers could identify or pick up on the political apparatus
located in fiction, namely in their favourite Gothic and sentimental
novels.
As a matter of
fact, both the Monthly and Critical reviews make
direct reference to the political nature of Charlotte Smith’s
Desmond (1792). Interestingly, the two reviews offer
opposing feelings about Smith’s political display. The
September 1792 edition of the Critical Review criticises
Smith’s novel for its connection with ‘the reformers,
and the revolutionists’ and believes she has represented
their (the reformers and revolutionists) in too ‘favourable
[a] light’ (EN1, 1792: 52). The December 1792 edition
of the Monthly Review, on the other hand, praises Smith
for her ability to ‘interweave with her narrative many
political discussions […] that are no less interesting
to women than to men’ (EN1, 1792: 52). In this way, Smith’s
Desmond and her other sentimental novels, as well as
Radcliffe’s gothic texts participate in political work
on one or more levels.
Much recent criticism
discloses the political nature of gothic fiction. For example,
in ‘Gothic Fiction and the French Revolution’, Ronald
Paulson asserts that the Gothic plot of the 1790s differs significantly
from its predecessors. While the 1790s Gothic is preoccupied
with ‘revolution’ and ‘liberation’,
the pre-1790s Gothic is concerned with the defence and preservation
of the ‘ancien regime’. [11]
Indeed for Paulson, the 1790s Gothic novel is about the French
Revolution. Through the Gothic narrative, writers either intentionally,
or even unintentionally through imitation, engaged in the political
debates of the period.
Paulson further
distinguishes between two strands of Gothic fiction at the time.
Gothic written in the early stages of the French Revolution
is about liberation and the eventual punishment of the oppressor;
whereas after the Reign of Terror, the Gothic manifests, through
its excesses, the ‘potential for simple inversion of the
persecutor-persecuted relationship’. [12]
Thus, similar to the Revolution, the Gothic opens up a space
for ‘enormous possibilities’, ‘followed by
a ‘stage of delusion’, in which there are ‘dangerous,
unforeseen consequences’. [13]
Reduced to its simplest but most politically telling form, the
Gothic is ‘concerned with the preservation and destruction
of property’, in which both the tyrant and the oppressed
are preoccupied with its ‘appropriation’. [14]
Paulson also asserts that the reader’s experiences of
the Gothic parallel the experiences of the Gothic’s female
protagonist; her confusion, suspicion, and slowly resolved mystery
correspond to the reader’s real political experience in
the 1790s. [15]
Confusion, suspicion, and uncertainty about the future embodied
both the English and European state of mind, and England’s
‘spoon-fed’ information about the Revolution’s
progress served only to heighten its anxieties.
Jacqueline Howard
also offers interesting insight into how the Gothic intervenes
in 1790s politics. Howard contends that contemporary debates
about the ‘aesthetic principles’ of landscaping
‘were often aligned […] with certain political
and social ideologies’. [16]
The ‘neatness’ and ‘simplicity’ of English
gardens (i.e. wild nature restrained) corresponded to the English
Constitution, which ensured a happy medium between the unrestrained
masses and a potentially despotic government. [17]
In fact, Howard claims that Radcliffe’s The Mysteries
of Udolpho participates in the ‘landscaping debate’,
which particularly aroused public interest in 1794 (the year
of Udolpho’s publication) when the debate reached
the peak of its intensity. Because Radcliffe emphasises ‘the
precedence of nature over culture’ repeatedly in Udolpho
and ‘accommodates a certain heterogeneity, irregularity,
and wildness’, Howard states that ‘some Britons
of the 1790s would have condemned [this] as “the Jacobinism
of taste” ’. [18]
Indeed, Radcliffe’s sublime and often lengthy landscape
descriptions have political currency.
Further demonstrating
how certain cultural phenomena and politics intertwine is E.
J. Clery, who emphasises the influence of the stage actress
Sarah Siddons on ‘Gothic sensibility in the 1790s’.
Siddons’s performances, which showcased her ‘power
of imagination’ and ‘passion’, especially
in the role of Lady Macbeth, had a special resonance not only
for female theatre goers, but also for female gothic writers.
Clery also points out, however, that Siddons’s infectious
performances and the female Gothic’s capitalisation on
passion as an ‘aesthetic resource’ are also embedded
in the larger cultural phenomenon of ‘contagious emotion’
that was often associated with the French Revolution and eventually
brought home to England in 1793 with the Treason Trials. The
Gothic, according to Clery, therefore, offered female writers
with a mode of art in which to experiment with the passions
and find ways to sublimate or channel them in healthy ways.
[19]
The Gothic also
provides an Edenic familial space headed by the heroine and/or
an imaginary utopia or a community of women that escapes the
tyranny of patriarchy. In The Contested Castle, Kate
Ferguson Ellis examines the ways in which the Gothic, with its
‘crumbling castles’ and ‘homeless protagonists’
is preoccupied with the middle-class home. [20]
‘A castle turned into a prison and reconverted into a
home (or destroyed so that its prisoners can establish a home
elsewhere)’, Ellis explains, ‘is the underlying
structure of the feminine gothic’. [21]
Such a ‘happy ending’ offers readers a narrative
in which ‘the castle can be purged of the villain’s
influence and repossessed as a place where family life is able
to flourish’with ‘family life’ representative
of an Edenic space justly ruled by the heroine. [22]
Held against the backdrop of tyranny that pervaded the 1790s,
the Gothic’s restoration of a familial model with the
heroine at its centre offers women readers a narrative of female
oppression that ultimately ends in freedom from that oppression.
In ‘Gothic
Utopia: Heretical Sanctuary in Ann Radcliffe’s The
Italian’, Brenda Tooley offers another way in which
the Gothic conjures up an imaginary utopia. Tooley suggests
that the convent, to which place the heroine of Radcliffe’s
The Italian escapes, represents an ‘embedded utopia’
within the larger ‘dystopian culture’. [23]
While a convent inhabited exclusively by women may at first
appear as a form of silencing and a tool of conformity, Tooley
asserts that silence and conformity merely ‘disguise “safe” dissent’.
Moreover, the exclusively female utopian society ‘comments
upon the exercises of power’ that surround it. [24]
The paradox, as Tooley points out, however, is that this all
female society ‘is dependent upon the larger structure
that enables its existence’, even as it offers its members
a place for ‘unregulated freedom of conscience’.
[25]
Still, Tooley views Radcliffe’s The Italian as
entering the important discussion on the many proposals offered
for both women’s colleges and women’s communities
during the eighteenth-century. [26]
Most significantly, The Italian is similar in its portrayal
of ‘motherly authority’ and how its ‘informing
goodness […] permeates the community’. [27]
The female utopian community, that is often a part of the Gothic
narrative, therefore, is not simply proffering its reader with
unrealistic escapism from the ‘real’ world; it actually
and actively engages with the political and social world.
Finally, another
way in which to interpret the Gothic as engaged in the political
is to see it as a vehicle for English identity formation. Cannon
Schmitt, in ‘Techniques of Terror, Technologies of Nationality:
Ann Radcliffe’s The Italian’, claims that
all of Radcliffe’s novels participate in the formation
of English national identity. ‘Specifically attributable
to the Gothic’, Schmitt claims, is ‘the fictional
presentation of foreign landscapes and foreign villains as anti-types,
exempla of otherness’. [28]
Furthermore, the Gothic’s heroine, in contrast to the
English ‘localism’ of ‘the lower classes’
and the English ‘cosmopolitanism’ of Machiavellian
aristocrats’, epitomises proper English behaviour, because
it is presented as ‘natural’ or inherent. [29]
Also, according to Schmitt, the reader’s identification
with the heroine, through the Gothic’s various ‘techniques
of terror’, ‘induce[s] a wide-ranging paranoia’,
resulting in a constant vigilance of the foreign ‘other’
as well as the ‘self’. [30]
Thus, Gothic displacement on the foreign as well as the idealised
Gothic English heroine both contribute to the formation of English
national identity.
Just as Radcliffe’s
Gothic novels uncover England’s preoccupation with establishing
a national identity through fostering distrust of the foreign
‘other’, Smith’s sentimental fiction is concerned
with establishing an identity for women. Ellis recounts Katherine
Rogers claim about the sentimental novel in Feminism in Eighteenth-Century
England: ‘the sentimental novel is […] on the
side of women as they struggled against the limitations within
which they must live if they do not want to forfeit respectability’.
[31]
A possible and quite credible reason for the sentimental novel’s
outstanding success is that by ‘de-emphasising female
agency, the sentimentalists used the novel to place the feminine
sphere at the centre of their plots, and to reveal it as the
power vacuum it was’. In this way, sentimental authors
like Charlotte Smith ‘opened the door’ for their
readers exposing them to their oppression in hopes of bringing
about protest. [32]
Like the Gothic, the sentimental novel has its roots in the
French Revolution and offers female readers a way in which they
can explore the very profound questions of subjectivity sparked
by the political unrest of the 1790s: what does it mean to be
an individual in the state? And what does it mean to be an individual
in a community? More specifically for Smith, what does it mean
to be a woman in England? And how can women be valued as an
intrinsic part of that community?
Although many
critics today fault Charlotte Smith for her incessant complaining,
her whining was political; it was in the name of female individuality.
Elizabeth Kraft explains in ‘Encyclopedic Libertinism
and 1798: Charlotte Smith’s The Young Philosopher’,
that by 1798, Charlotte Smith’s political agenda was ‘engaged
with questions and questionings, structures and restructurings
of authority that could be described as “libertine” ’.
[33]
As a liberal, Smith was anti-Burke and celebrated the power
of revolution whether ‘theoretical/intellectual or political/practical
in intent, domestic or national or international in scope’.
[34]
To internalise revolution, to embrace philosophy and a natural
law over religion and God was Smith’s attempt to move
out of the patriarchal centre and take her female readers with
her. Like Smith herself, her characters suffered under structures
identified with masculinity and reason. Unfortunately Smith
was unable to come out from underneath the oppressive conditions
that plotted against female agency and independence. But she
was able to imagine this liberty in her heroines. For female
readers of the 1790s, Smith, like Radcliffe, showed her readers
what radical change looked like and offered women a means through
which their own ‘complaining’, as an individual
and as a community, could be political.
Our study of
the Hookham archives of the 1790s discloses not only an extraordinary
increase in the consumption of novels by women, but it also
reveals that the novels purchased were mostly written by women.
Indeed, it appears that both money and time enabled these privileged
city-dwelling women to engage more fully with fiction. However,
such a dramatic rise in purchases by women in relation to the
women of the Fergus study prompts further explanation. An increase
in the production of novels during this turbulent decade, to
some extent, can account for the substantial increase, but this
explanation mistakenly assumes that supply guarantees or justifies
demand. Therefore, it is also quite conceivable that women were,
in fact, discovering a way in which to engage in the politically
active decade in which they lived. The novels of Radcliffe and
Smith provided Hookham’s female clients with a venue for
political participation. Moreover, the term ‘leisured
women’ tends to negatively connote that these women read
more novels, not just because they had more time, but because
they had nothing else to do. Thus, their exclusion from the
masculine world of politics, in some ways, parallels the widow
or single women who read novels to compensate for a solitary
life, and, so once again it is easy to assign to these women
the long held cliché about women and novel reading. But
we are stressing that Hookham’s female customers, in fact,
found a way to circumvent female exclusion from politics. Their
novel reading provided them with a special kind of agency in
a male dominated world. In the end, the novel for Hookham’s
female clients is comparable to Tooley’s claim about the
convent motif in Gothic fiction; it disguises the ‘safe’
dissent of what we would describe as an ‘imagined’
community of female readers.

NOTES
1. These
figures are derived from the introduction to Jan Fergus’s
unpublished book on the provincial reading public, Readers
and Fiction.
2. In
her unpublished study of two Midland booksellers, the Clays
of Daventry, Rugby, Lutterworth, and Warwick (174484)
and Timothy Stevens of Cirencester (17821807), book
historian Jan Fergus argues that the Clay records, with the
corroborating support of the Stevens records, both support
and contradict preconceived notions about novels and their
audiences. The records uphold the long held assertion of the
‘insignificance of novels in provincial print culture’,
but, more interestingly, the records contradict the critics’
widely held belief of a ‘predominantly female readership
for eighteenth-century novels’. The archives, as Fergus
claims, manifest ‘a predominantly male provincial readership
for fiction.’ Because of their dominance in the market,
provincial men were also greater consumers of female-authored
fiction, even though the records reveal an equal demand for
both male- and female-authored fiction. Thus, Fergus concludes
that the provincial market supported the rise in female-authored
novels, which, as has been argued, reached its climax at the
close of the century, even though novels by women never exceeded
the number of novels produced by men during the eighteenth-century.
3. In
other words, we examined more than half of Hookham’s
ledgers, because the ‘F Ledger’ is significantly
larger than either the ‘G Ledger’ or ‘Petty
Ledger G.’
4. Fergus,
Readers and Fiction.
5. Peter
Garside, James Raven, and Rainer Schöwerling (gen. eds),
The English Novel 17701829: A Bibliographical Survey
of Prose Fiction Published in the British Isles, 2 vols
(Oxford and New York: OUP, 2000), I,
Entry 1792: 50. Herein after abbreviated as EN1, followed
by entry no.
6. Jacqueline
Howard, Reading Gothic Fiction: A Bakhtinian Approach
(New York: OUP, 1994), pp. 910.
7. Margaret
Anne Doody, The True Story of the Novel (New Brunswick:
Rutgers University Press, 1996), p. 278.
8. Ibid.,
p. 278.
9. Most
notable treatises include: Mary Wollstonecraft’s A
Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792), William Godwin’s
An Enquiry Concerning the Principals of Political Justice,
and Its Influence on General Virtue and Happiness (1793),
and Mary Hays’ Appeal to the Men of Great Britain
in Behalf of Women (1798).
10.
Eleanor Ty, Introduction to Mary
Hays’ A Victim of Prejudice (Ontario: Broadview,
1998), p. xi.
11.
Ronald Paulson, ‘Gothic Fiction
and the French Revolution’, ELH 48 (1981), 53254,
pp. 53637.
12.
Ibid., p. 538.
13.
Ibid., p. 543.
14.
Ibid., p. 541.
15.
Ibid., pp. 54142.
16.
Howard, Reading Gothic Fiction, p. 113.
17.
Ibid., p. 113.
18.
Ibid., p. 117.
19.
E. J. Clery, Women’s Gothic: From Clara Reeve to
Mary Shelley (Devon: Northcote, 2000), p. 15.
20.
Kate Ferguson Ellis, The Contested Castle: Gothic Novels
and the Subversion of Domestic Ideology (Chicago: University
of Illinois Press, 1989), p. ix. 
21.
Ibid., p. 45.
22.
Ibid., p. 48.
23.
Brenda Tooley, ‘Gothic Utopia:
Heretical Sanctuary in Ann Radcliffe’s The Italian’,
Utopian Studies 11 (2000), 4256, p. 2.
24.
Ibid., p. 2.
25.
Ibid., p. 2.
27.
Ibid., p. 3.
28.
Cannon Schmitt, ‘Techniques of
Terror, Technologies of Nationality: Ann Radcliffe’s
The Italian’, ELH 61 (1994), 85376,
p. 855.
29.
Ibid., pp. 85758.
30.
Ibid., pp. 85556.
31.
Ellis, The Contested Castle,
p. 30.
32.
Ibid., p. 30.
33.
Elizabeth Kraft, ‘Encyclopedic
Libertinism and 1798: Charlotte Smith’s The Young
Philosopher’, Eighteenth-Century Novel 2
(2002), 23972, p. 243.
34.
Ibid., p. 239.
II
APPENDIX
Table
1: List of Female Authors, Novels, and Years of Publication
Ann Radcliffe
-
The Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne.
An Highland Story (1789)
-
A Sicilian Romance (1790)
-
The Romance of the Forest (1791)
-
The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794)
-
The Italian, or the Confessional of
the Black Penitents (1797)
Charlotte Smith
-
The Romance of Real Life (1787)
-
Emmeline, the Orphan of the Castle
(1788)
-
Ethelinde, or the Recluse of the Lake
(1789)
-
Celestina (1791)
-
Desmond (1792)
-
The Old Manor House (1793)
-
The Banished Man (1794)
-
The Wanderings of Warwick (1794)
-
Montalbert (1795)
-
Marchmont (1796)
-
The Young Philosopher (1798)
Mary Robinson
-
Vancenza; or, the Dangers of Credulity
(1792)
-
The Widow, or a Picture of Modern Times
(1794)
-
Angelina (1796)
-
Hubert De Sevrac, a Romance of the
Eighteenth Century (1796)
-
Walsingham; or, the Pupil of Nature
(1797)
-
The False Friend: A Domestic Story
(1799)
Table 2: Comparison of Hookham & Carpenter’s Female
Customers, with Those of Clay and Stevens
|
|
1791–98
HOOKHAM &
CARPENTER |
1744–84
CLAY*
(inc. Warwick County
and
Rugby Schoolboys) |
1780–1806
STEVENS* |
| Total customers |
984 |
2700 |
588 |
| Total female
customers |
478 |
257 |
15 |
| Total female
customers (%) |
48.6% |
9.5% |
2.6% |
| No.
women customers who purchased novels by women |
77
purchased novels by Radcliffe, Smith, or Robinson |
11
purchased novels by women (6 of these also puchased
novels by men) |
4
purchased novels by women (2 of these also puchased
novels by men) |
| %
women customers who purchased novels by women |
16.1%
(as above) |
4.3% |
27% |
| No. women
customers who purchased any novels at all |
167 |
28 |
8 |
| % women
customers who purchased any novels at all |
35% |
10.9% |
53% |
| *
As Professor Fergus’s book is still in the process
of publication, these figures are provisional. |
Fig. 1: Publishers
of Authors, by Quantities Sold

Table 3: Four Case Studies: Number of Purchases by Genre
| |
Mrs Gardiner |
Marchioness
of Downshire |
Lady Vanneck |
Dowager
Duchess of Leinster |
Totals |
| Novels* |
1 (1) |
18 (14) |
6 (5) |
15 (12) |
40 (32) |
| Poetry |
|
1 |
|
4 |
5 |
| Drama |
2 |
2 |
|
|
4 |
| Mixed Fiction |
|
|
|
1 |
1 |
| History |
|
|
3 |
2 |
5 |
| Conduct Book |
1 |
|
1 |
1 |
3 |
| Children’s Book |
|
1 |
1 |
|
2 |
| Religion |
1 |
|
|
3 |
4 |
| Education |
|
1 |
1 |
1 |
3 |
| Reference |
1 |
1 |
2 |
|
4 |
| Politics |
|
1 |
|
|
1 |
| Pamphlet |
|
|
|
1 |
1 |
| Magazine |
10 |
|
|
|
10 |
| Cookbook |
1 |
|
|
|
1 |
| Recreational |
2 |
|
|
|
2 |
| Total |
19 |
25 |
14 |
28 |
86 |
| % purchases that are
novels authored by women |
5.3% |
56% |
36% |
43% |
37% |
| *
Figures in parentheses indicate no. of female-authored
works. |

COPYRIGHT
INFORMATION
This article is copyright © 2005
Centre for Editorial and Intertextual Research, and
is the result of the independent labour of the scholar
or scholars credited with authorship. The material
contained in this document may be freely distributed,
as long as the origin of information used has been
properly credited in the appropriate manner (e.g.
through bibliographic citation, etc.).
This essay was originally
presented at both the British Association for Romantic
Studies, Romantic Textuality 1770–1835 Interdisciplinary
Post-Graduate Conference and the East-Central/American
Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies Conference.
REFERRING
TO THIS ARTICLE
R. J. KURTZ and J. L. WOMER. ‘The
Novel as Political Marker: Women Writers and their
Female Audiences in the Hookham and Carpenter Archives,
1791–1798’, Cardiff Corvey: Reading
the Romantic Text 13 (Winter 2004). Online: Internet
(date accessed): <http://www.cf.ac.uk/encap/corvey/articles/cc13_n02.html>.
CONTRIBUTOR
DETAILS
Rita J. Kurtz is a PhD student and
Teaching Fellow at Lehigh University in Bethlehem,
PA, and is presently preparing to take her comprehensive
exams in August. Her research interests include eighteenth-century
British and nineteenth-century American Gothic and
Sensational fiction. She has presented several papers
at conferences, including the Eleventh Annual 18th-
and 19th-Century British Women Writers Conference
and the Mid-Atlantic American Studies Association
Spring 2004 Conference.
Jennifer L. Womer is
a PhD student and Teaching Fellow at Lehigh University
in Bethlehem, PA. She is currently preparing to take
her comprehensive exams this August. Her research
interests include late eighteenth-century British
fiction, British Romanticism, and psychoanalytic theory.
She has presented papers at several conferences including
the Eleventh Annual 18th- and 19th-Century British
Women Writers Conference.

Last modified
2 September, 2005
.
This document is maintained by Anthony Mandal (Mandal@cf.ac.uk).
|