1. SMUGGLING, POACHING AND THE REVULSION AGAINST KINSHIP IN THE OLD MANOR HOUSE
- Author
-
James Holt McGavran
- Subjects
Government ,History ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Corruption ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Poaching ,Criminology ,Greed and fear ,Nightmare ,Gender Studies ,Adult life ,Politics ,Law ,medicine ,Kinship ,medicine.symptom ,media_common - Abstract
Beyond Charlotte Smith's bleak personal history lay a natural world that she could lovingly describe but never lose herself in, and a political world that rang with promises of a new, fairer society even while it was thoroughly violated and corrupted by greed and fear. From her girlhood on the South Coast she was aware of the rampant smuggling and poaching all around her, activities which involved the majority of the local population in huge webs of criminality, and which the British Crown was not able to control until the 1830s, decades after her death. She would also have known that corruption within the government itself was at least partly responsible for these depredations. Analysis of The Old Manor House (1793), her best-known novel, reveals that her nightmare vision of British criminality and vice in the later eighteenth century made her even less hopeful regarding the gender and family issues against which she struggled for all her adult life.
- Published
- 2009