Hannah Foster's "The Coquette"
Hannah Webster Foster's The Coquette is scarcely remembered today, a point that she herself would probably have expected. Few women writing at the end of the 18th century could have expected that their works would prove to have the fame or longevity of those pieces written by their male counterparts. Whether a work endures for long enough to be included in literary canons is to some extent dependent on the quality of that work. But, as the case of the novel under consideration here demonstrates, it is often far more the result of whether the person who wrote the novel was considered by the intellectual elite of the time to be the right kind of person to write the kind of work to be cherished by later generations.
As a woman, Foster was not the "right" kind of person to be a writer, at least not in her own time. But recent reevaluations of her own work (as well as other women who were writing in the United States in the 18th century) has allowed us to have a greater appreciation of the work produced by these early American women writers. Foster's The Coquette seems to us today both a good story - something of a potboiler, it is true, but potboilers are blessed with the great good fortune in a novel of having a compelling plot - as well as a fascinating exploration of the ways in which women could step outside of the customary roles that their sex was supposed to maintain.
Both in her own life, and in the life of her characters, Foster created alternative stories for women to live.
Foster based the events of the novel on the someone she knew: The book has about it as a result not a small dose of the didactic (which was a common element running through a great deal of American literature in this generation) as well as something of the allegorical, for the coquette of the title is made by Foster to stand in for many women in difficult situations.
The "Eliza Wharton" of Foster's...
Coquette In Hannah Webster Foster's novel The Coquette, the protagonist Eliza Wharton leads an unconventional life following the death of her fiance, and her death is ultimately attributed to the evils of the seductive powers of her second suitor, Major Sanford (with some of the guilt resting on her). However, this interpretation of Eliza's life, provided most explicitly by the letters of Julia Granby, actually serves to reinforce the social structures
Women and Marriage The institute of Marriage should be viewed as a consummation of love and not as a social contract which gives economic and social stability. Freedom is better sought in the confinements of love and marriage is better perceived as a strengthening relationship rather than loss of freedom. The prevailing social structure in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries played a vital role in defining the ideas of marriage. During these
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