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Eliza Haywood, by George Vertue from 1725, the same time that Alexander Pope was describing her as "a Juno of majestic size,/ With cow-like-udders, and with ox-like eyes" in The Dunciad (A II 155-6).
 
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There are 9 critical essays on Eliza Haywood.

Critical Essays on Eliza Haywood
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Critical Essay by Christine Blouch
7,809 words, approx. 26 pages
In the following essay, Blouch discussess Haywood's relative biographical and critical obscurity.
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Critical Essay by Mary Anne Schofield
6,548 words, approx. 22 pages
In the following essay, Schofield analyzes Haywood's depiction of prostitutes in her fiction.
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Critical Essay by Helene Koon
6,254 words, approx. 21 pages
In the following essay, Koon discusses the social context of Haywood's periodical The Female Spectator.
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Critical Essay by Mary Anne Schofield
4,712 words, approx. 16 pages
In the following essay, Schofield provides an overview of the theme of masking in four of Haywood's popular novels.
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Critical Essay by John J. Richetti
4,484 words, approx. 15 pages
In the following essay, Richetti analyzes female speech in Haywood's works, especially in The Rash Resolve, and compares it with that depicted by other eighteenth-century novelists.
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Critical Essay by Mary Anne Schofield
3,069 words, approx. 10 pages
In the following essay, Schofield examines the theme of disguise in Haywood's Miss Betsy Thoughtless.
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Critical Essay by Joyce M. Horner
2,730 words, approx. 9 pages
In the following excerpt, Horner provides an assessment of Haywood's work and career.
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Critical Essay by Jane Spencer
2,612 words, approx. 9 pages
In the following excerpt from her study of female novelists in English, Spencer examines the theme of the reformed heroine in Haywood's novel Miss Betsy Thoughtless.
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Critical Essay by Mary Anne Schofield
2,279 words, approx. 8 pages
In the following essay, Schofield offers an analysis of Haywood's female heroines and of Haywood's role in the development of the novel. Schofield also examines ways that Haywood's works contribute to an understanding of eighteenth-century social life.


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