Photos can be viewed on the event facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/events/2094244057466958/permalink/2116252491932781/
Thank you Nancy for a delightful talk!
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You are Cordially Invited to JASNA-Vermont’s September Meeting
at the Burlington Book Festival
“Planting the Seeds for the Austen Oeuvre:
Mary Wollstonecraft and the Rights of Woman.”
with
Nancy Means Wright*
In an illustrated talk, Wright will describe 18th-century writer Mary Wollstonecraft’s traumatic and unconventional life in an era when women were victims of primogeniture and considered incapable of reason. She will discuss Mary’s groundbreaking Vindication of the Rights of Woman, and her Unitarian publisher’s circle of Dissidents; her years in revolutionary Paris when she lost her head to a feckless American captain – and her voyage to Scandinavia as a lone woman in search of a missing “silver ship.” She will also consider the ongoing question: Was Jane Austen influenced by Mary Wollstonecraft?
Sunday, September 18, 2016 2 – 4 pm
Morgan Room, Aiken Hall**
83 Summit Street
Champlain College
Burlington VT
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Sponsored by JASNA-Vermont and Bygone Books
~ Free & open to the public ~
~ Light refreshments served ~
For more information: JASNAVTregion [at] gmail.com
Please visit our blog at: http://JaneAustenInVermont.wordpress.com
Burlington Book Festival website: http://burlingtonbookfestival.com/
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*Vermont author Nancy Means Wright has published fiction with St Martin’s Press, Dutton, Perseverance Press, and elsewhere, including a trilogy of historical mysteries featuring 18th-century Mary Wollstonecraft. Her most recent works are Queens Never Make Bargains, a novel, and The Shady Sisters, a collection of poems. Short stories and poems appear in American Literary Review, Green Mountains Review, Carolina Quarterly, and others. Her children’s books have received an Agatha Award and a grant from the Society of Children’s Book Writers. A former teacher and Bread Loaf Scholar, Nancy lives in Middlebury, Vermont, with her spouse and two Maine Coon cats. Her books will be available for purchase and signing.
**Aiken Hall is located at 83 Summit St – #36 on the map here: https://www.champlain.edu/Documents/Admissions/Undergraduate%20Admissions/Campus-Map.pdf Parking is on the street or in any College designated parking during the event.
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Hope you can join us!
Wish I could be there. Saw the portrait of Mary Wollstonecraft in The National Portrait gallery the other day with Marilyn. I must admit I got really fascinated by the giant painting showing the trial of Caroline of Brunswick. I wonder what Mary Wollstonecraft would have thought about the treatment of Caroline of Brunswick? (1820 long after Mary died of course.) The trial painting is an incredible thing. Sorry, got off the point.
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I am always intrigued by the influences that might have worked upon Jane Austen. Would love to hear this presentation but live too far away; perhaps some snippets might make their way to the blog? Thank you.
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Yes, I’ll try to get something on there after the event – there are a few essays on the possibility of Wollstonecraft’s influence on Austen, though she does not mention her at all. Here’s one that is available online: http://www.jasna.org/persuasions/on-line/vol25no1/ascarelli.html – a blog post: https://laurengilbertheyerwood.wordpress.com/2012/01/09/jane-austen-and-mary-wollstonecraft-did-jane-read-a-vindication-of-the-rights-of-woman/ – I’ll dig up the best article I have found on the topic.
Thanks for stopping by!
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