Bibliographic Information

The wanderer, or, Female difficulties

Frances Burney ; edited by Margaret Anne Doody, Robert L. Mack, and Peter Sabor ; with an introduction by Margaret Anne Doody

(The world's classics)

Oxford University Press, 1991

Other Title

Wanderer

Female difficulties

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [xl]-xlii)

Description and Table of Contents

Description

"The Wanderer" or "Female Difficulties" is the tale of a penniless emigree from revolutionary France trying to earn her living in England while guarding her own secrets. Combining the best elements of the Gothic and historical novels, this work is an extraordinary piece of Romantic fiction. Burney's tough comedy offers a satiric view of complacent middle-class insularity that echoes Godwin and Wollstonecraft's attacks on the English social structure. The problems of the new feminism and of the old anti-feminism are explored in the relationship between the heroine and her English patroness and rival, the Wollstonecraftian Elinor Joddrel, and the racism inherent within both the French and British empires is exposed when the emigree disguises herself as a black woman. This edition is fully annotated with appendices on the French Revolution, race relations, amusements and geography, and a previously unpublished manuscript revealing the connection between "The Wanderer" and "Camilla".

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