'Mrs. Meeke' was the most prolific novelist of the Romantic period, publishing twenty-four novels and four translations between 1795 and 1823, eclipsing Walter Scott's twenty-two titles. Yet until recently, scholars knew little about her, and she was misidentified for decades as 'Mary Meeke,' the wife of a Staffordshire vicar. It was not until 2013 that an article by Simon Macdonald conclusively revealed the author's actual identity as Elizabeth Meeke—not a respectable vicar's wife, but the scandalous stepsister of Frances Burney. Meeke published all her fiction with the infamous Minerva Press, which issued staggering levels of new fiction written primarily by women. Meeke's title-pages employed a complex system of authorship: some works ca...
Through the exploration of a selection of Minerva titles from across the period of the Press’s domin...
“Publishing the Victorian Novel” looks to the methods of book history and literary criticism to ask ...
Drawing together Braddon’s writing and the rapidly evolving Victorian literary world, this thesis ex...
'Mrs. Meeke' was the most prolific novelist of the Romantic period, publishing twenty-four novels an...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
This essay examines the false and dubious attributions of select Minerva novels to both Ann Radcliff...
County Cork-born author L. T. Meade (1844–1914) is the consummate example of the once extraordinaril...
This article examines the popular and non-canonical Victorian novelist Ouida (Maria Louise de la Ram...
This article examines the publication history of a popular group of loosely related, variously autho...
Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s long career coincided with a shift in writing practices, as the Victorian l...
Writing from the end of the seventeenth century through the mid-eighteenth century in England, the f...
If I were to distil this thesis into a single question it would be: what are the circumstances that ...
Eighteenth-century women writers repeatedly expressed resistance to the public exposure of print pub...
Through the exploration of a selection of Minerva titles from across the period of the Press’s domin...
“Publishing the Victorian Novel” looks to the methods of book history and literary criticism to ask ...
Drawing together Braddon’s writing and the rapidly evolving Victorian literary world, this thesis ex...
'Mrs. Meeke' was the most prolific novelist of the Romantic period, publishing twenty-four novels an...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
This essay examines the false and dubious attributions of select Minerva novels to both Ann Radcliff...
County Cork-born author L. T. Meade (1844–1914) is the consummate example of the once extraordinaril...
This article examines the popular and non-canonical Victorian novelist Ouida (Maria Louise de la Ram...
This article examines the publication history of a popular group of loosely related, variously autho...
Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s long career coincided with a shift in writing practices, as the Victorian l...
Writing from the end of the seventeenth century through the mid-eighteenth century in England, the f...
If I were to distil this thesis into a single question it would be: what are the circumstances that ...
Eighteenth-century women writers repeatedly expressed resistance to the public exposure of print pub...
Through the exploration of a selection of Minerva titles from across the period of the Press’s domin...
“Publishing the Victorian Novel” looks to the methods of book history and literary criticism to ask ...
Drawing together Braddon’s writing and the rapidly evolving Victorian literary world, this thesis ex...