A Political Biography of Eliza Haywood


Kathryn R King


Eighteenth-Century Political Biographies
Hb: 288pp: June 2012
978 1 85196 917 3: 234x156mm: £60.00/$99.00
E ISBN   978 1 85196 676 9

While under arrest in 1750 on suspicion of producing a seditious pamphlet Eliza Haywood insisted she ‘never wrote any thing in a political way’. This study of her life and works, the first full-length biography in almost a century, views Haywood's life through the prism of her shifting political allegiances.

Known today for her novels of sexual passion, Haywood wrote much in the ‘political way’. She exposed ongoing financial corruptions in her early scandal chronicles. By the mid-1730s she had joined the campaign to topple Walpole, attacking him in the blistering Oriental satire Eovaai (1736) and performing on stage in Fielding’s final plays at the Haymarket. In the forties and fifties she produced political journalism for various factions in the Opposition. She sold anti-ministerial propaganda at her own pamphlet-shop at the Sign of Fame in Covent Garden, wrote a Jacobite weekly paper attacking the Duke of Cumberland and promoted the mid-century cult of the Patriot Prince in the deceptively entitled Epistles to the Ladies (1749–50).

Sample pages

Readership

Eighteenth-Century Studies, Politics and Women's Studies

Contents

Introduction
1 ‘Her Approach to Fame’: 1714–29
2 Memoirs of a Certain Island Adjacent to Utopia
3 Theatrical Thirties: 1729–37
4 Adventures of Eovaai
5 At the Sign of Fame: 1741–4
6 The Female Spectator
7 The Parrot
8 Epistles for the Ladies
9 Was Haywood a Jacobite?
Epilogue: The Invisible Spy

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