Article
Details
Citation
Halsey K (2015) The home education of girls in the eighteenth-century novel: 'the pernicious effects of an improper education'. Oxford Review of Education, 41 (4), pp. 430-446. https://doi.org/10.1080/03054985.2015.1048113
Abstract
This essay explores the relationship between theories of domestic pedagogy as articulated in eighteenth-century conduct books, and fictional representations of home education in novels of the period. The fictional discussions of domestic pedagogy interrogate eighteenth-century assumptions about the innate superiority of a domestic education for women. In so doing, they participate in a much wider eighteenth-century and Regency-period debate about the proper role of women in public life. In order to make the argument that a woman's education was vital to the public welfare of the nation, writers from Mary Wollstonecraft to Jane Austen shifted the grounds of the debate, making the previously private into a matter of public concern. Early eighteenth-century ideals of domestic education, which kept women firmly in the private sphere, therefore began to seem outdated.
Keywords
novel; 
eighteenth century; 
conduct books; 
Jane Austen; 
home education
Journal
Oxford Review of Education: Volume 41, Issue 4
| Status | Published | 
|---|---|
| Publication date | 31/12/2015 | 
| Publication date online | 26/06/2015 | 
| URL | http://hdl.handle.net/1893/22101 | 
| Publisher | Taylor and Francis | 
| ISSN | 0305-4985 | 
| eISSN | 1465-3915 | 
People (1)
Professor, English Studies