Jonathan Swift was the subject of gossip and criticism in his own time concerning his relations with women and his representations of them in his writings. For over twenty years he regarded Esther Johnson, "Stella," as "his most valuable friend," yet he is reputed never to have seen her alone.
From his time to our own there has been speculation that the two were secretly married--since their relationship seemed so inexplicable then and now. For thirteen of the years that Swift seemed committed to Stella as the acknowledged woman in his life, he maintained a clandestine--but apparently
also nonsexual--relationship with another woman, Esther Van Homrigh, or "Vanessa." Jonathan Swift in the Company of Women looks again at these much-examined relationships and at others that reveal Swift as a man who enjoyed the company of a number of women as pupils and as ministrants to his various
needs.
Swift, a man with a complex private life, was also a writer whose satiric portraits of women could be unsparing. While Swift often criticized women for frivolous pastimes and idle chatter, his most notorious texts on women image their bodies as loathsome: as he once wrote in a serious political
tract, a woman is a "nauseous, unwholesome carcass." Such representations cross a line by showing a repugnance for women as a sex, the biological other. They have led, not surprisingly, to repeated charges of misogyny, an issue that Jonathan Swift in the Company of Women addresses at some length.
This first book-length treatment of Swift and women comprehensively examines Swift''s attitude toward women in all their manifestations in his work and life: as intimates, acquaintances, proteges, wives, mothers, nurses, disobedient daughters, young women who marry older men, and--finally--as poets
and critics.
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Louise Barnett is a professor of English at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick.
"That wit was thought ''an exclusively male habit of mind'' is one of those eighteenth-century crimes of which the modern male is rightfully ashamed. louise Barnett argues strongly against it, producing some plucky one-liners.... This is a splendid book."--David Nokes, Times Literary Supplement "Louise Barnett''s Jonathan Swift in the Company of Women should effectively put to rest future spculation about Swift and his women friends as it clarifies a multitude of errors and expectations regarding the Dean''s love life. Barnett''s chief contributions to Swift studies...are the clarity with which she assesses past attempts at understanding Swift and his women friends; her ease in debunking the over-emphasis modern critics pace on Swift the misogynist; and the new sharpness she brings through her own analyses of Swift''s poetry and prose." --The Eighteenth-Century Intelligencer
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