Title: Eliza Haywood
1ELIZA HAYWOOD
1693? - 1756
2Biography
-Born Elizabeth Fowler -Was likely married
between 1714-1719 -Had two illegitimate children
-Was linked romantically to Richard Savage and
William Hatchett
3Why don't we know more about her life?
This is possibly the result of a request on her
death bed to a particular Person, who was well
acquainted with all the Particulars of it, not to
communicate to any one the least Circumstance
relating to her (Ballaster, Seductive Forms 159)?
4- We do know that Haywood produced over 40 works of
fiction, four translations, a biography, multiple
plays, a history of the stage, seven periodicals,
numerous poems and pamphlets and two collected
editions of her works. - (Fowler, A Woman Writing Among Men, 1.)?
5SCANDALS
Alexander Pope wrote about
Haywood in his poem
The Dunciad See in the circle next, Eliza
plac'd Two babes of love close clinging to her
wasteFair as before her works she stands
confess'd, In flow'rs and pearls by bounteous
Kirkall dress'd. The Goddess then "Who best can
send on high The salient
spout, far-streaming to the sky
His be yon Juno of majestic size,
With cow like udders, and with ox-like
eyes. Pope takes the focus off of her writing
and into her personal life by proclaiming her two
children to be illegitimate.
6SCANDALS
Richard Savage also wrote about Haywood in
The Authors of the Town 1725 A Cast off
Dame, who of intrigues can judge, Writes Scandal
in Romance --- A Printer's Drudge! Flush'd with
Success, for Stage-Renown she pants, And melts,
and swells, and pens luxurious Rants.
7Women In The 18th Century
- Eighteenth-Century Women were living in a time of
great female suppression that demanded limited,
frivolous education for females and discouraged
female sexuality. - Daniel Defoes novel Moll Flanders accurately
portrays womens education as learning
accomplishments such as music, reading, writing,
French, and dancing (Defoe 54)
http//www.costumes.org/history/18thcent/women/hoe
y'splates/louisxv.jpg
8Women of the 18th Century
- Mary Wollstonecraft
- Recognized as one of the first feminists,
- Wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, which
spoke against this frivolous education - that the instruction which women have hitherto
received has only tended, with the constitution
of civil society, to render them insignificant
objects of desiremere propagators of fools!if
it can be proved that in aiming to accomplish
them, without cultivating their understandings,
they are taken out of their spheres of duties,
and made ridiculous and useless when the
short-lived bloom of beauty is over
(Wollstonecraft 173)?
http//www.btinternet.com/glynhughes/squashed/wol
lstonecraft.htm
9- Wollstonecraft went against top thinkers of her
day like Rousseau, whom Wollstonecraft stated he
believed that a woman should never for a moment,
feel herself independent, that she should be
governed by fear to exercise her natural cunning,
and made a coquetish slave in order to render her
a more alluring object of desire, a sweeter
companion to man (Wollstonecraft 179).
1018th Century Women and the Sexual Double Standard
- Eighteenth-Century women were expected to be
virtuous or sexually chaste, although the men of
this time period were not held to this
expectation - the conduct expected of women as virgins,
wives, and widows rested on the assumption that
sexual desire was proper to the male and
unbecoming to the female (Brophy 27).
http//www.costumes.org/history/100pages/18thwomn.
htm
11- While a wife must be above reproach, she must
tolerate, even expect, a much lower order of
conduct from her husband, both in sexual
promiscuity and in other masculine prerogatives
such as drunkenness (Brophy 11). - If, within a marriage, a woman realized that her
husband was cheating on her, during this time
period a woman was to treat her husband with
patience and gentleness, but if this same
situation was reversed, death was a fit
punishment for the woman (Brophy 11). - It was during this period of female suppression
that Eliza Haywood wrote Fantomina
http//www.costumes.org/history/100pages/18thwomn.
htm
12Summary of Fantomina
- A tale of an unnamed young gentlewomans
seduction of the gentleman Beauplaisir - 4 seductive personas
- Fantomina Prostitute
- Celia Chamber Maid
- Widow Bloomer Woman In Mourning
- The Fair Incognita never allows him to see her
face - Her deceptions catch up with her She gets
pregnant, her mother discovers her affairs, and
she is sent to a convent.
http//www.buy.com/prod/fantomina-and-other-works/
q/loc/106/36344045.html
13How was she able to trick one that was so
intimately acquainted with her person??
- she was so admirably skilld in the Art of
feigning, that she had the Power of putting on
almost what Face she pleasd, and knew so exactly
how to form her Behaviour to the Character she
represented, that all the Comedians at both
Playhouses are infinitely short of her
performances (Demaria 722). - In short She was a very good actress!
http//asecsgrad.blogspot.com/2007_12_01_archive.h
tml
14Haywoods structure in Fantomina
- Robert Scholes explains the common structure of
the novel as the following the sophisticated
forms of fiction, as in the sophisticated
practice of sex, much of the art consists of
delaying climax within the framework of desire in
order to prolong the pleasurable act itself.
(175)? - Haywood contrasts this male model of fiction,
with a fiction based upon the feminised
structure of multiple climaxes. (Potter, 175)?
15Fantomina
- A representation of Societal injustices
- - women betrayed into prostitution by
manipulative men - - servant girls seduced and ruined by the men
they work for - - wronged widows, left for destitution
-
(www.jahsonic.com/EnglishErotica)?
16Anti-Feminist or Feminist
- Many critics have argued that the punishment of
Fantomina at the end of Haywoods novella has
conformed this book to the Eighteenth-Century
gender bias that male promiscuity is acceptable
but female promiscuity must be punished - in the melancholy reiteration of female
defeat at the hands of the fictionalizing male
libertine, Fantomina provides only a temporary
respite from the ultimate persecution necessarily
awaiting the seduced maiden (Croskery 25).
- This defeatist and anti-feminist view of
Fantomina can be contradicted in the notion that
in punishing the heroine, Haywood employs a
literary technique that While the disapproving
rhetoric that surrounds oppositional, subversive,
or inflammatory statements ostensibly disarms
them, those statements are themselves
nevertheless conveyed verbatim to the reader who
is the ultimate arbiter and who absorbs them in
any case (Behrendt 30).
17What Haywoods Communicating
- In Fantomina Haywood confirms the
anti-essentialist construction of femininity
hinted at so consistently throughout her career,
demonstrating, through her most sexually
disruptive female character, womens capacity to
manipulate and control the signs by which her
social, economic and sexual position as woman is
perceived and constructed by the public
majority. (Potter, 176-177)?
18- Haywoods empowering of Fantomina with reason and
rational action instead of hysterical fits makes
her the female equivalent to Haywoods male
rakes, who assume a series of different
identities to court their mistresses and avert
the possibility of discovery (Ballaster,
Preparations to Love 60). - Her Design was once more to engage him, to hear
him sigh, to see him languish, to feel the
strenuous Pressures of his eager Arms, to be
compelled, to be sweetly forcd to what she
wished with equal Ardour, was what she wanted,
and what she had formd a Stratagem to obtain, in
which she promisd herself Success (Demaria
719).
19- In a time when women were treated like infidels,
Fantomina recognizes she has outsmarted
Beauplaisir and congratulates herself on her
victory over him But I have outwitted even the
most Subtle of the deceiving Kind, and while he
thinks to fool me, is himself the only beguiled
Person (Demaria 722).
http//www.costumes.org/history/100pages/18THMOVE.
HTM
20WORKS CITED
- 1st photo http//www.answers.com/topic/eliza-haywo
od - 2nd Photo of R.S http//www.probertencyclopaedia.c
om/cgi-bin/xphrase.pl?keywordrichardsavage - 3rd photo of AgtP. http//clatterymachinery.files.w
ordpress.com/2007/03/alexander-pope-marblehill.jpg
- Ballastar, Ros. Seductive Forms Womens Amatory
Fiction from 1684 to 1740. Oxford Clarendon
Press, 1992. - Wollstonecraft, Mary. A Vindication of the
Rights of Woman. The Norton Anthology English
Literature Vol.D. 8th ed. Ed. Stephen Greenblatt.
New York W. W. Norton Company, Inc. 2006.
170-195. - Behrendt, Stephen C. Introduction. Zastrozzi. By
Percy Bysshe Shelley. 1810. Ed. Stephen C.
Behrendt. Ontario Broadview Press Ltd. 2002. - Brophy, Elizabeth Bergen. Womens Lives and the
18th-Century English Novel. Tampa University of
South Florida Press, 1991. - Croskery, Margaret Case, and Anna C. Patchias.
Introduction. Fantomina. By Eliza Haywood. 1725.
Ed. Pettit, Croskery, Patchias. Ontario
Broadview Press Ltd. 2004. - Defoe, Daniel. Moll Flanders. Ed. Paul A.
Scanlon. Ontario Broadview Press Ltd. 2005.