New Woman writers’ explorations of motherhood came at the end of the nineteenth century when pressures on women to prioritize motherhood were heightened in the face of growing feminist activism and concerns about the future of the nation. Grant Allen, for one, argued the importance of motherhood in women’s lives in his 1889 article ‘Plain Words on the Woman Question,’ claiming that ‘A woman ought to be ashamed to say she has no desire to become a wife and mother’ (452). His primary concern was clearly with the health of the nation: ‘In Britain, at the present day … an average of about six children per marriage (not per head of female inhabitants) is necessary in order to keep the population just stationary’ (Allen 450). This stance was rein...