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The Female American (1767) Unca Eliza Winkfield

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The Female American (1767) By Unca Eliza Winkfield

The Female American (1767) by Unca Eliza Winkfield


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Summary

One of the earliest novelistic efforts to articulate an American identity, and more specifically to investigate what that identity might promise for women. This second edition has been updated throughout and includes a greatly expanded selection of historical materials on castaway narratives and the cultural context of colonial America.

The Female American (1767) Summary

The Female American (1767) by Unca Eliza Winkfield

When it first appeared in 1767, this novel was called a sort of second Robinson Crusoe; full of wonders. Indeed, The Female American is an adventure novel about an English protagonist shipwrecked on a deserted isle, where survival requires both individual ingenuity and careful negotiations with visiting local Indians. But what most distinguishes Winkfield's novel is her protagonist, a woman who is of mixed race. Though the era's popular novels typically featured women in the confining contexts of the home and the bourgeois marriage market, Winkfield's novel portrays an autonomous and mobile heroine living alone in the wilds of the New World, independently interacting with both Native Americans and visiting Europeans. The Female American is also one of the earliest novelistic efforts to articulate an American identity.

This second edition has been updated throughout and includes a greatly expanded selection of historical materials on castaway narratives and on the cultural context of colonial America.

The Female American (1767) Reviews

The pleasures of reading and teaching The Female American emerge from this edition's insistence on a more capacious scope for early American studies, one in sync with recent scholarly emphases on transatlantic, global, and intersectional contexts of cultural production and consumption ... this second edition of The Female American, expanded by sixty pages, features a fascinating, revised introduction, one that further reveals to readers the elaborate intertextual and global aspects of the novel. Burnham and Freitas suggest rather than instruct, a welcome approach to introductory matter; they provide frames of inquiry - utopian studies; female adventure literature; and discourses of imperialism, of religion, of identity, and of hybridity - within which students and teachers might critically examine the text. Additionally, this edition's useful chronology along with two contemporary reviews effectively aid in historicizing and contextualizing the novel. With this second edition, the scholarly and pedagogical significant of The Female American in our own historical moment becomes even more compelling, as students and teachers struggle daily with issues of migration, racial difference, imperialism, and political and culture identity. - Lorrayne Carroll, Early American Literature

Comments on the first edition:

This adeptly edited page-turner of a novel is a fascinating descendant of Robinson Crusoe and an important example of the kinds of cross-Atlantic fiction being written to explore issues of colonialism, race, gender, nationhood, and human rights in the decade before the American Revolution. - Paula Backscheider, Auburn University

Graced by an uncommonly interesting as well as learned introduction, this edition of the virtually unknown novel The Female American will invigorate any collection of colonial American literature. - Myra Jehlen, Rutgers University

About Unca Eliza Winkfield

Michelle Burnham is Professor of English at Santa Clara University.

James Freitas is an undergraduate student in English at Santa Clara University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Introduction
The Female American in Literary Context: A Brief Chronology
A Note on the Text

The Female American

Appendix A: The Colonial Americas and Its Native Peoples

  1. From Thomas Harriot, A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia (1590)
  2. From George Percy, Percy's Discourse of Virginia (1625)
  3. From John Smith, The Generall Historie of Virginia (1624)
  4. From Aphra Behn, Oroonoko (1688)

Appendix B: Ibn Tufayl and Autodidactic Castaways

  1. From The History of Josephus the Indian Prince (1696)
  2. From George Keith, The Woman-Preacher of Samaria (1674)
  3. From Simon Ockley, The Improvement of Human Reason (1708)
  4. From The Life and Surprizing Adventures of Don Juliani de Trezz (1720)
  5. From The History of Autonous (1736)
  6. From John Kirkby, The Capacity and Extent of the Human Understanding (1745)

Appendix C: Isolated Castaways

  1. From William Dampier, New Voyage Round the World (1697)
  2. From Woodes Rogers, A Cruising Voyage Round the World (1712)
  3. From Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe (1719)
  4. From Daniel Defoe, Serious Reflections During the Life and Surprising Adventures of Robinson Crusoe (1720)
  5. From Peter Longueville, The Hermit (1727)

Appendix D: Castaway Communities

  1. From [Ambrose Evans], The Adventures and Surprizing Deliverances, of James Dubourdieu, and his Wife (1719)
  2. From Penelope Aubin, The Life of Charlotta Du Pont, An English Lady (1723)
  3. From A Remarkable Voyage in the South Sea, Edinburgh Magazine (1760)

Appendix E: Reviews of The Female American

  1. The Monthly Review (1767)
  2. The Critical Review (1767)

Works Cited and Recommended Reading

Additional information

NGR9781554810963
9781554810963
1554810965
The Female American (1767) by Unca Eliza Winkfield
New
Paperback
Broadview Press Ltd
20140910
250
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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