Description
Women Writers and the Nation’s Past 1790-1860: Empathetic Histories offers a groundbreaking examination of how female authors fundamentally transformed historical writing and national consciousness during the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Prof. Mary Spongberg investigates the innovative ways women writers employed empathy as a literary and historical tool to challenge conventional historical narratives and construct alternative visions of the nation’s past.
Drawing on extensive research, this book demonstrates how women authors used fiction, biography, and historical accounts to center marginalized perspectives and humanize historical experience. The work reveals how empathetic histories written by women writers became influential in shaping Victorian and early modern understandings of national identity, social progress, and historical meaning, establishing their vital contributions to both literary and historical scholarship.







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