3 edition of Maria Edgeworth found in the catalog.
Maria Edgeworth
Isabel Constance Clarke
Published
1950
by Hutchinson in London, New York
.
Written in English
Edition Notes
Bibliography: p. 201.
Genre | Biography. |
Classifications | |
---|---|
LC Classifications | PR4646 .C6 |
The Physical Object | |
Pagination | 208 p. |
Number of Pages | 208 |
ID Numbers | |
Open Library | OL6073585M |
LC Control Number | 50013785 |
OCLC/WorldCa | 374788 |
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Maria Edgeworth has books on Goodreads with ratings. Maria Edgeworth’s most popular book is Belinda. Maria Edgeworth was born on 1 January at her maternal grandfather's home at Black Bourton, Oxfordshire, England.
Her father, an Anglo-Irishman, Richard Lovell Edgeworth (–), writer, scientist, inventor and educationist, would marry four times and in total have twenty-four children. Maria Edgeworth's novel, Belinda, is an absorbing, sometimes provocative, tale of social and domestic life among the English aristocracy and gentry.
The heroine of the title, only too conscious of being 'advertised' on the marriage market, grows in moral maturity as she seeks to balance self-fulfilment with achieving material success. Throughout the book, Maria Edgeworth explores the theatre--and theatricality-- of identity, shaped by artifice and the distortions of others and our own needs for self-dramatization as well as by Reason and Truth.
The first chapter is eerily reminiscent of Proust: long delvings into vivid elaborated fantasies, the trapped, claustrophobic feel /5(6).