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Mr. Grant Allen is a large-minded, liberal man, and he argues that if men are permitted to practice polygamy then women should be equally free to indulge in polyandry. I do not know that he approves of polygamy, only he is liberal enough to say that if men are to claim sexual freedom then it should
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by refusing to get married herself, Victoria Crosse's heroine
Eurydice Williamson—"the woman who didn't"—remains faithful to her impossible husband although, during a passage from India, she meets a man who falls in love with her. Similarly, Lovett Cameron's hero is a married man who resists the
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for instance describing how, in small-town
Hampshire, "copies were bought and handed round until practically everyone of mature age in the village had read and passed judgement on it". However, the novel was also controversial right from the start, with conservative readers as well as feminists
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and starts living alone. As she is not a woman of independent means, she starts working as a teacher. When she meets and falls in love with Alan
Merrick, a lawyer, she suggests they live together without getting married. Reluctantly, he agrees, and the couple move to Italy. There, in
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172:"If one young girl is kept from a loveless, mistaken marriage, if one frivolous nature is checked in her career of flirtation by remembrance of Lady Morris, I shall perhaps be forgiven by the public for raising my feeble voice in answer to
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be accorded to women also. The story answers the question when followed to its logical conclusions, and shows very clearly that women have nothing to gain and everything to lose by renouncing the protection which legal marriage gives.
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saw this novel and her own novel "The
Superfluous Woman" as important in trying to resolve the "Sex Question" which she thought dominated intellectual debate in the 1880s. She was annoyed when
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before their daughter
Dolores is born. Legal technicalities and the fact that the couple were not married prevent Herminia from inheriting any of Merrick's money.
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woman who defies convention as a matter of principle and who is fully prepared to suffer the consequences of her actions. It was first published in
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Dreaming of being a role model for
Dolores and her friends, Herminia returns to England and raises her daughter as a
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cause and saw his novel as a way to promote women's rights. It certainly created an immediate popular sensation -
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approved more of Allen's progressive aims in the novel, than of their artistic realisation.
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reinvented the question when he spoke to the Fabian
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A New Woman reader : fiction, articles, and drama of the 1890s
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criticizing Allen for the heroine he had invented. For example,
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Lorna Sage; Germaine Greer; Elaine
Showalter (1999).
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Whereas
Herminia Barton questions the institution of
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258:The Cambridge guide to women's writing in English
242:, OxfordIndex.oup.com, retrieved 23 February 2014
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160:Another novel written in reply to Allen's work,
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407:Free MP3 audiobook of The Woman Who Did
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391:"The Woman Who Wouldn't Do"
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350:(London 1994) p. 645
230:(Penguin 2015) p. 44
139:The Woman Who Didn't
19:For other uses, see
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143:Mrs. Lovett Cameron
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120:Reception
90:Cambridge
62:New Woman
58:John Lane
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