Catharine Sedgwick, Redwood: A Tale
Redwood follows Ellen Bruce as she enters adulthood, navigating the clashing social currents of pious New England farmers, southern belles from South Carolina, slave-owning atheists from Virginia, and sophisticated Philadelphia socialites on her journey to discover the secret of her parentage and craft her own identity as a strong American woman. The novel's embedded slave narrative provides a powerful early prototype for later anti-slavery fiction. Ellen's formidable mentor, Debby Lenox, a single woman who stands over six feet tall and makes her own rules about what constitutes respectable behaviour for women, is remarkably refreshing and original almost two centuries after Sedgwick crafted her.
This new edition includes a historically and theoretically informed critical introduction that situates the novel within American social and literary history, also featuring a bibliography for further research and appendices detailing the significant differences between the two nineteenth-century editions.

1137915584
Catharine Sedgwick, Redwood: A Tale
Redwood follows Ellen Bruce as she enters adulthood, navigating the clashing social currents of pious New England farmers, southern belles from South Carolina, slave-owning atheists from Virginia, and sophisticated Philadelphia socialites on her journey to discover the secret of her parentage and craft her own identity as a strong American woman. The novel's embedded slave narrative provides a powerful early prototype for later anti-slavery fiction. Ellen's formidable mentor, Debby Lenox, a single woman who stands over six feet tall and makes her own rules about what constitutes respectable behaviour for women, is remarkably refreshing and original almost two centuries after Sedgwick crafted her.
This new edition includes a historically and theoretically informed critical introduction that situates the novel within American social and literary history, also featuring a bibliography for further research and appendices detailing the significant differences between the two nineteenth-century editions.

33.95 In Stock
Catharine Sedgwick, Redwood: A Tale

Catharine Sedgwick, Redwood: A Tale

Catharine Sedgwick, Redwood: A Tale

Catharine Sedgwick, Redwood: A Tale

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$33.95 
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Overview

Redwood follows Ellen Bruce as she enters adulthood, navigating the clashing social currents of pious New England farmers, southern belles from South Carolina, slave-owning atheists from Virginia, and sophisticated Philadelphia socialites on her journey to discover the secret of her parentage and craft her own identity as a strong American woman. The novel's embedded slave narrative provides a powerful early prototype for later anti-slavery fiction. Ellen's formidable mentor, Debby Lenox, a single woman who stands over six feet tall and makes her own rules about what constitutes respectable behaviour for women, is remarkably refreshing and original almost two centuries after Sedgwick crafted her.
This new edition includes a historically and theoretically informed critical introduction that situates the novel within American social and literary history, also featuring a bibliography for further research and appendices detailing the significant differences between the two nineteenth-century editions.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781399511117
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 01/25/2023
Series: Edinburgh Critical Editions of Nineteenth-Century Texts
Pages: 368
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x (d)

About the Author

Jenifer Elmore is Professor and Chair of English at Palm Beach Atlantic University. Her publications include “Sedgwick and Edgeworth: A Transatlantic Tale of Emulation, Flattery, and Rivalry,” Symbiosis: A Journal of Transatlantic Studies,” Spring 2018 and “Reversing the Curse”: Slavery, Child Abuse, and Huckleberry Finn,” (with C. Dale Girardi), American Literary Realism, Fall 2016.

Table of Contents

AcknowledgementsEditor’s IntroductionSelected BibliographyNote on the TextChronology of Sedgwick’s Life and WorksCast of Characters

Redwood: A Tale

Appendix A: Sedgwick’s Preface to the 1850 editionAppendix B: Significant Revisions for the 1850 editionExplanatory Notes

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