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Virtue reconsider’d
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06 October 2026
HISTORY / Women, Social and cultural history, HISTORY / Modern / 18th Century, HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / Georgian Era (1714-1837), Gender studies: women and girls, Feminism and feminist theory, History
Dr Alison Daniell, University of Southampton
Dr Kim Simpson, Deputy Director, Chawton House
Introduction: Adventurous wives; or, virtue reconsider’d
Alison Daniell & Kim Simpson
I: Wives and the law: Constructing the wife
1 Litigious and literary wives: Teresia Phillips, Melinda Graham and Sarah Rippon
Sarah Ailwood
2 Rethinking marriage: The ideology of wifely duty as subversive agency
Amy Clarke
II: Wives in literature: Writing the wife
3 Wives as they were: Married women in eighteenth-century comedy
Eva Lippold
4 ‘A labyrinth of adventures’: Married women and masculine virtue in Mary Robinson’s Letter to the Women of England (1799) and The Natural Daughter (1799)
Anne Claire Michoux
5 Subversive bodily sensibility in Charlotte Smith’s Emmeline
Heather Heckman-McKenna
III: Wives in the economy: Paid labour and property ownership
6 Rediscovering Francesca Corri née Bacchelli (c.1749-1802)
Brianna Robertson-Kirkland
7 A card to the ladies: Working wives in Winchester and Salisbury
Alison Daniell
8 Wives as slave owners: Elite women in Georgian theatre audiences
David Worrall
Afterword: Going public; or, beyond received narratives
Bibliography
Index