Victorian Secrets
Not Wisely, But Too Well
Not Wisely, But Too Well
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Jewsbury's moral squeamishness was not shared by the reading public, who were thrilled by Broughton's vivid depiction of Kate Chester teetering on the brink of an adulterous liaison with the solipsistic and haughty Dare Stamer. Notwithstanding the extensive editorial changes, Broughton's novel remains a pioneering portrayal of female sexuality, or what Jewsbury called "highly coloured & hot blooded passion".
Reproducing the text of its first appearance in volume form, this new edition of Not Wisely, but Too Well illuminates the novel's ideological and aesthetic complexity through appendices related to its publication history, revision, and reception. These appendices include a section containing Jewsbury's reader's report and Broughton and Le Fanu's correspondence with the Bentleys, a list of variants between serial and volume formats of the novel, and a selection of contemporary reviews. Together these materials provide a fascinating case study of the coming to print, and reception, of a controversial Victorian text, while also attesting to the challenges Broughton faced in representing female desire in her early fiction.
This completely reset critical edition includes:
* Introduction by Tamar Heller
* Explanatory footnotes
* Rhoda Broughton chronology
* Select bibliography
* Correspondence from the Bentley Archives relating to Not Wisely, but Too Well
* Textual variants between the serialised and three-decker versions, including the original ending
* Selection of contemporary reviews and responses.
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