Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 The subject of violence: Mary Lamb, femme fatale
- 2 Violence against difference: Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Robinson and women's strength
- 3 “The aristocracy of genius”: Mary Robinson and Marie Antoinette
- 4 Unnatural, unsexed, undead: Charlotte Dacre's Gothic bodies
- 5 “In seraph strains, unpitying, to destroy”: Anne Bannerman's femmes fatales
- 6 “Life has one vast stern likeness in its gloom”: Letitia Landon's philosophy of decomposition
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
5 - “In seraph strains, unpitying, to destroy”: Anne Bannerman's femmes fatales
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 The subject of violence: Mary Lamb, femme fatale
- 2 Violence against difference: Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Robinson and women's strength
- 3 “The aristocracy of genius”: Mary Robinson and Marie Antoinette
- 4 Unnatural, unsexed, undead: Charlotte Dacre's Gothic bodies
- 5 “In seraph strains, unpitying, to destroy”: Anne Bannerman's femmes fatales
- 6 “Life has one vast stern likeness in its gloom”: Letitia Landon's philosophy of decomposition
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Like Charlotte Dacre, the Edinburgh poet Anne Bannerman (1765–1829) situated her writing in the tradition of Mathew Lewis, in this case the Gothic ballads included in The Monk and Tales of Wonder. Dacre had associated her fiction with Mathew Lewis's for maximum sensational effect, leading to high sales and notoriety of name. Dacre's success in the “school of Lewis” came not without scandal, though it seems clear that Dacre herself, familiar with controversy throughout her childhood, had skillfully channeled critics' outrage into publishing success, in part through her sexually charged authorial persona. While Dacre's writing reveled in the sexual and blasphemous excesses of Lewis's writing, Bannerman was interested in different qualities of the Gothic, choosing instead to intensify the obscurity and ambiguity characteristic of Lewis's supernatural poetry and Radcliffe's novels. Perhaps these contrasting qualities of the Gothic, its erotic explicitness and its studied ambiguity, help account for Dacre's publishing success as a novelist, and Bannerman's commercial failure as a poet.
Bannerman's first volume, Poems (1800), published by Mundell in Edinburgh and Longman in London, was dedicated to the influential scholar Dr. Robert Anderson. Poems was highly praised in reviews and contained a series of extended poems such as “The Genii” and “The Nun,” original odes and sonnets, and two sonnet series based on Petrarch and Werther. Her second volume, the Gothic ballad collection Tales of Superstition and Chivalry (1802), was published anonymously by Vernor and Hood, and received less favorable reviews.
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- Information
- Fatal Women of Romanticism , pp. 156 - 194Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002