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Eugenia and Adelaide, a novel

Sheridan, Frances

Authors

Frances Sheridan



Contributors

Abstract

Frances Sheridan's Eugenia and Adelaide is an astonishing first novel of parental tyranny, infidelity, kidnap, blackmail, and violence played out over two volumes against the backdrop of continental Europe. The friendship of Eugenia and Adelaide endures in spite of their separation at the beginning of the novel and remains central to a complex yet coherently drawn web of intriguing tales situated in palatial apartments and remote moss-covered castles. Drawing upon the tragic and comic possibilities of disguise familiar to her from Shakespearean and Restoration drama, and influenced by the romantic entanglements of early prose fiction, Sheridan adopts a sometimes satirical approach to extraordinary events at the same time that she demonstrates a sincere and convincing commitment to the ingenious art of storytelling. Sheridan completed the novel in 1739 when she was just fifteen-years old and Eugenia and Adelaide would prove instrumental to the establishing of Sheridan's literary reputation as one of the most successful novelists and dramatists of the mid-eighteenth century. This is the first modern edition of Eugenia and Adelaide to be published since the original posthumous publication of 1791 and presents a unique opportunity to explore Sheridan's contribution to our current understandings of the history of women's writing, and of reading tastes and practices in the long eighteenth century.

Citation

Sheridan, F. (2019). A. M. Fitzer (Ed.), Eugenia and Adelaide, a novel. New York: Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429054549

Book Type Scholarly Edition
Publication Date May 28, 2019
Deposit Date Apr 28, 2022
Publisher Routledge
Book Title Eugenia and Adelaide, A Novel: Frances Sheridan
ISBN 9780367150174
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429054549
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/3761796