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Lucinda (novel)

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1807 novel

Lucinda; or, The Mountain Mourner is an epistolary novel by P. D. Manvill (1764–1849), first published in 1807. A bestseller at the time, it was widely distributed and went through numerous editions.

In Lucinda, the eponymous protagonist is raped, becomes pregnant, descends into poverty, and dies shortly after giving birth. Booher classifies Lucinda as a work of sentimental fiction. In particular, following Nina Baym, she describes it as a "novel of seduction", in which the female protagonist becomes pregnant and comes to a tragic end as a result. Cathy Davidson, following Helen Papashvily, argues that Lucinda marks an end of the seduction plot in American literature—with Hester Prynne as one outlier in this regard.

Booher likens Lucinda to The Coquette (1797), noting that both works are preoccupied with the protagonist's so-called virtue, or abstinence from premarital sex.

The work is set in upstate New York, in Saratoga Springs and near Marcellus.

Notes

  1. Booher, Mischelle (2003). "Mrs. P. D. Manvill and The Feminist Companion: Some Corrections". ANQ. 16 (3): 26–27. doi:10.1080/08957690309598211. ISSN 0895-769X.
  2. Anderson 2010, p. 301.
  3. ^ Booher 2007, pp. 285–286.
  4. Davidson, Cathy N. (1980). "Mothers and Daughters in the Fiction of the New Republic". In Davidson, Cathy N.; Broner, E. M. (eds.). The Lost Tradition: Mothers and Daughters in Literature. New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing Company. p. 125. OCLC 1036694352.
  5. Booher 2007, p. 287.
  6. "Recent Acquisitions". The Courant. 11. Syracuse University Library: 9. 2010. ISSN 1554-267X.

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