- Catharine Sedgwick
Infobox Writer
name = Catharine Maria Sedgwick
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birthdate = birth date|1789|12|28
birthplace =Stockbridge, Massachusetts
deathdate = Dda|1867|07|31|1789|12|28
deathplace =Boston, Massachusetts
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nationality = American
period = 1822 - 1857
genre =Domestic fiction
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website =Catharine Maria Sedgwick (
December 28 ,1789 –July 31 ,1867 ), was an Americannovel ist of what is now referred to asdomestic fiction .Born in
Stockbridge, Massachusetts , she was the daughter of a prosperouslawyer and successful politician,Theodore Sedgwick , who later became a judge of theMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court andSpeaker of the United States House of Representatives . She was sent to study at afinishing school inBoston , and as a young woman she took charge of a school in Lenox. Sedgwick's conversion fromCalvinism toUnitarianism led her to write a pamphlet denouncingreligious intolerance that evolved into her first novel, "A New-England Tale".In 1827, her third novel "Hope Leslie" recounted a dramatic conflict between British colonists and Native Americans. The book earned a large readership and made her one of the most talked-about female novelists of the day. Sedgwick's writings involved American settings, combining
patriotism with protestations againstPuritan oppressiveness. Her topics would become important to the creation of a national literature enhanced through her detailed descriptions of nature. Sedgwick created spirited heroines who, as the focal point of her stories, did not conform to the stereotypical conduct of women at the time. In her later work, "Married or Single", she put forth the bold idea that women should not marry if it meant they would lose their self-respect.Much in demand, from the 1820s to the 1850s Catharine Sedgwick made a good living writing short stories for a variety of periodicals. Following her death in 1867, by the end of the 19th century she had been relegated to near obscurity. Interest in her works and an appreciation of her contribution to American literature was largely stimulated by the advent of low-cost electronic reproductions that became available at the end of the 20th century.
She is buried in the family plot in
Stockbridge, Massachusetts .Novels:
*"A New-England Tale " (1822)
*"Redwood" (1824)
*"Hope Leslie " (1827)
*"Clarence" (1830)
*"The Twin Lives of Edwin Robbins " (1832)
*"The Linwoods " (1835)
*"Home" (Boston, 1835)
*"The Poor Rich Man, and the Rich Poor Man" (New York, 1837)
*"Live and Let Live"(See Richard Bushman, "Refinement in America", 1992, pp. 276-79 for a discussion of the above three novels)
*"Married or Single? " (1857)Other Writings:
*"Letters from Abroad to Kindred at Home, in two volumes " (1841)External links
* [http://dlxs2.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=cdl;idno=cdl353 Married or Single?] Cornell University Library Historical Monographs Collection. {Reprinted by} [http://www.amazon.com/dp/1429739762/?tag=corneunivelib-20 Cornell University Library Digital Collections]
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