AISNA - Associazione Italiana di Studi Nord-Americani
Doi
Abstract
In The Coquette (1797), Hannah Foster creates the first female individualist in American literature, Eliza Wharton, but places her within the restrictive and punitive confines of a conventional seduction narrative. The heroine's covert manipulation of sexual double-standards emerges as an ill-fated, single-handed fight against larger socio-biological forces, and results in ruin and death. The rhetoric of renunciation in which Eliza's doubtful redemption narrative is couched barely disguises the innovative and disturbing quality of her story
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