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Martineau, H: Autobiography
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Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Introduction
Harriet Martineau: A Brief Chronology
A Note on the Text

Autobiography

Appendix A: Illustrations from the Autobiography (1877)

Appendix B: Selections from the Memorials (1877)

  • Private Memorandum (June 1829)
  • Letter from Harriet Martineau to her Mother(22 January 1830)
  • Letter to the Editor of “Men of the Time”(22 March 1856)
  • Obituary, London Daily News (29 June 1876)
  • Appendix C: Contemporary Reviews

  • Margaret Oliphant, Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine (April 1877)
  • John Morley, Macmillan’s Magazine (May 1877)
  • W.R. Greg, The Nineteenth Century (August 1877)
  • Works Cited and Recommended Reading

    About the Author

    Linda H. Peterson is Niel Gray, Jr. Professor and Director of Graduate Studies in the Department of English, Yale University.

    Reviews

    “Words like ‘extraordinary’ and ‘remarkable’ are not misplaced in describing Harriet Martineau’s Autobiography. Controversial throughout her life, she is, in Linda Peterson’s words, ‘a superb storyteller,’ recounting all that happened to her with outspoken directness. In a field dominated by male practitioners, Martineau's uncompromising account of her life, relationships, travels, and illnesses deserves much wider recognition. In this first comprehensively annotated edition of the text since it was originally published in 1877, readers can fully appreciate what made Martineau a compelling teller of her own tale.” — Valerie R. Sanders, University of Hull“Harriet Martineau’s Autobiography is something much more complex than a conventional autobiography. Martineau’s long and elaborate work was self-consciously written in a hybrid form to offer advice and support for many areas of Victorian women’s experience. It considers the spiritual life, illness, education and, most powerfully of all, professional journalism as a way of life. It is an important book, less well known than it should be. This attractive and scrupulously, but unobtrusively, annotated edition by a leading scholar of Victorian women’s life writing brings a major text within reach of all those interested in Victorian women and their public and private lives.” — Brian Maidment, University of Salford

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