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--Djjr (talk) 15:44, 6 November 2011 (UTC) Sent you a few references

--MaggieWoll 15:06, 20 November 2011: This is a very long article! What changes have you made/are you intending to make?

--Oakshep819 (talk) 20:41, 27 November 2011 (UTC) I agree with her. It is hard to search for changes. Sorry about the lateness in doing this.

here's my draft of the Harriet Martineau article

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Abakoss/sandbox
 
Born(1802-06-12)12 June 1802
Norwich, England
Died27 June 1876(1876-06-27) (aged 74)
Ambleside, England
Notable worksDeerbrook (1839) The Hour and the Man (1839)

Harriet Martineau (12 June 1802 – 27 June 1876) was an English social theorist and Whig writer, often cited as the first female sociologist.[1]

Martineau wrote over 50 books from a sociological, holistic, religious, domestic, and, perhaps most controversial, a feminine perspective, as well as translating various works from Auguste Comte. Martineau has said of her approach: “when one studies a society, one must focus on all its aspects, including key political, religious, and social institutions'. She believed a thorough societal analysis was necessary to understand women’s status. Martineau’s writing introduced refreshing sociological perspectives on otherwise overlooked issues such as marriage, children, domestic and religious life, and race relations.[1]

Early life

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The sixth of eight children, Harriet Martineau was born in Norwich, England, where her father was a manufacturer. The family was of French Huguenot ancestry and professed Unitarian views. Her brother, James Martineau, was a clergyman of some note in the tradition of the English Dissenters. The atmosphere of her home was industrious, intellectual and austere. She was clever, but weak and unhappy. She had no sense of taste or smell, and became deaf while young, having to use an ear trumpet. At the age of sixteen, due to her health and nerves, she made a prolonged visit to her father's sister, Mrs Kentish, who kept a school at Bristol. In the companionship of amiable and talented people, her life became happier. Here she fell under the influence of the Unitarian minister, Dr Lant Carpenter, from whose instructions, she says, she derived "an abominable spiritual rigidity and a truly respectable force of conscience strangely mingled together." From 1819 to 1830 Martineau again resided chiefly at Norwich. About her twentieth year, her deafness became confirmed. In 1821 she began to write anonymously for the Monthly Repository, a Unitarian periodical, and in 1823 she published Devotional Exercises and Addresses, Prayers and Hymns.

In 1826 her father died, leaving a bare maintenance to his wife and daughters. His death had been preceded by that of his eldest son, and was shortly followed by that of a man to whom Harriet was engaged. Mrs Martineau and her daughters soon after lost all their means by the failure of the financial house where their money was placed. Harriet Martineau had to earn her living, and, being precluded by deafness from teaching, took up authorship in earnest. Besides reviewing for the Repository, she wrote stories (afterward collected as Traditions of Palestine), gained in one year (1830) three essay prizes of the Unitarian Association, and eked out her income by needlework. In 1831 she was seeking a publisher for a series of tales designed as Illustrations of Political Economy. After many failures, she accepted disadvantageous terms from Charles Fox, to whom she was introduced by his brother William, the editor of the Repository. The sale of the first of the series was immediate and enormous, the demand increased with each new number, and from that time her literary success was secured.

London and the United States

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In 1832 Martineau moved to London, where she numbered among her acquaintances Henry Hallam, Harriet Taylor, Alexander Maconochie, Henry Hart Milman, Thomas Malthus, Monckton Milnes, Sydney Smith, John Stuart Mill, George Eliot, Edward George Bulwer-Lytton, Elizabeth Barrett Browning and later Thomas Carlyle. Florence Nightingale and Charlotte Brontë also became her friends.

Until 1834 she continued to be occupied with her political economy series and with a supplemental series of Illustrations of Taxation. Four stories supporting the Whig Poor Law reforms came out about the same time. These tales (direct, lucid, written without any appearance of effort, and yet practically effective) display the characteristics of their author's style. Tory paternalists reacted by calling her a Malthusian "who deprecates charity and provision for the poor", while Radicals opposed her to the same degree. Whig high society fêted her. In May 1834 Charles Darwin got a letter from his sisters telling him that Martineau was "a great Lion in London" and recommending Poor Laws and Paupers Illustrated in pamphlet-sized parts. They added that their brother "Erasmus knows her & is a very great admirer & every body reads her little books & if you have a dull hour you can, and then throw them overboard, that they may not take up your precious room."

 
Harriet Martineau

In 1834, after completing the series, Harriet Martineau paid a long visit to the United States. Her support of abolitionism, then unpopular, caused controversy. This was increased by the publication, soon after her return, of Theory and Practice of Society in America (1837) and a Retrospect of Western Travel (1838), two books that led to the founding of modern sociology. Her article in the Westminster Review, "The Martyr Age of the United States", introduced English readers to the struggles of the abolitionists in America.

After the voyage of the Beagle, Charles Darwin went in October 1836 to stay with his brother Erasmus in London, and found him spending his days "driving out Miss Martineau". The Darwins shared her Unitarian background and Whig politics, but their father Robert was concerned that as a potential daughter-in-law, her politics were too extreme. He was upset by a piece he read in the Westminster Review calling for the radicals to break with the Whigs and give working men the vote "before he knew it was not hers, and wasted a good deal of indignation, and even now can hardly believe it is not hers."[citation needed]

Charles Darwin called on Martineau and remarked that "she was very agreeable, and managed to talk on a most wonderful number of subjects, considering the limited time", which included the social and natural worlds she was then writing about in her book Society in America, including the "grandeur and beauty" of the "process of world making" she had seen at Niagara Falls. He added that "I was astonished to find how ugly she is" and "she is overwhelmed with her own projects, her own thoughts and abilities", though "Erasmus palliated all this, by maintaining one ought not to look at her as a woman."[citation needed] For her part, Martineau described Darwin as "simple, childlike, painstaking, effective".[citation needed] After a later meeting when he was struggling with his own writing and she was starting Deerbrook, he expressed astonishment at the ease with which she wrote such fluent prose, and "never has occasion to correct a single word she writes", though she was "not a complete Amazonian, & knows the feeling of exhaustion from thinking too much."[citation needed]

Martineau followed the American books with a three volume novel, Deerbrook (1839)–a story of middle class country life with a surgeon hero. To the same period belong a few handbooks, forming parts of a Guide to Service. The veracity of her Maid of All Work led to a widespread belief that she had once been a such a maid herself.

Newcastle and Tynemouth

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In 1839, during a visit to Continental Europe, Martineau suffered a breakdown in health. She discovered that her chronic ill-health was due to an ovarian cyst. She visited her brother-in-law, the celebrated Newcastle upon Tyne doctor Thomas Michael Greenhow, on several occasions to try to alleviate her symptoms; on the last occasion staying for six months in the family house at 28 Eldon Square. She moved down-river to Tynemouth, where she stayed at Mrs Halliday's boarding-house, 57 Front Street for nearly five years from 16 March 1840. A plaque marks the house where she produced at least three books, including a novel The Hour and the Man, about the Haitian slave leader Toussaint L'Ouverture, and Life in the Sick-Room, describing her life in Tynemouth. She also devotes some hundred pages of her autobiography to this period. Notable visitors included Richard Cobden and Thomas Carlyle and his wife.

Expecting to remain an invalid for the rest of her life, she delighted in the freedom her telescope allowed. Across the Tyne was the sandy beach ″where there are frequent wrecks – too interesting to an invalid... and above the rocks, a spreading heath, where I watch troops of boys flying their kites; lovers and friends taking their breezy walks on Sundays..."[citation needed] She also gives a lyrical picture of Tynemouth:

"When I look forth in the morning, the whole land may be sheeted with glistening snow, while the myrtle-green sea tumbles... there is none of the deadness of winter in the landscape; no leafless trees, no locking up with ice; and the air comes in through my open upper sash, but sun-warmed. The robins twitter and hop in my flower-boxes... and at night, what a heaven! What an expanse of stars above, appearing more steadfast, the more the Northern Lights dart and quiver!"[citation needed]

Charles Dickens likely based his busybody Mrs Jellyby in Bleak House on Martineau, but she still retained her high regard for him .

During her illness, she for a second time declined a pension on the civil list, fearing to compromise her political independence. Her letter on the subject was published, and some of her friends raised a small annuity for her soon after.

Ambleside

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In 1844 Martineau underwent a course of mesmerism, returning to health after a few months. She eventually published an account of her case, which had caused much discussion, in sixteen Letters on Mesmerism. This led to friction with "the natural prejudices of a surgeon and a surgeon's wife". In 1845 she left Tynemouth for Ambleside in the Lake District, where she built herself "The Knoll", the house in which she spent the greater part of her later life.

In 1845 she published three volumes of Forest and Game Law Tales. In 1846 she made a tour with some friends in Egypt, Palestine and Syria, and on her return published Eastern Life, Present and Past (1848). This travelogue showed that as humanity passed through one after another of the world's historic religions, the conception of the Deity and of Divine government became at each step more and more abstract and indefinite. The ultimate goal Harriet Martineau believed to be philosophic atheism, but this belief she did not expressly declare. Her book described ancient tombs, "the black pall of oblivion" set against the paschal "puppet show" in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, with the message that Christian beliefs in reward and punishment were based on heathen superstitions. Describing an ancient Egyptian tomb, she wrote, "How like ours were his life and death!... Compare him with a retired naval officer made country gentleman in our day, and in how much less do they differ than agree!" The book's "infidel tendency" was too much for the publisher John Murray, who rejected it.

About this time Martineau published Household Education, expounding the theory that freedom and rationality, rather than command and obedience, are the most effectual instruments of education. Her interest in schemes of instruction led her to start a series of lectures, addressed at first to the school children of Ambleside, but afterward extended, at their request, to their parents. The subjects were sanitary principles and practice, the histories of England and North America, and the scenes of her Eastern travels. At the request of the publisher Charles Knight, in 1849 she wrote The History of the Thirty Years' Peace, 1816–1846 – an excellent popular history from the point of view of a "philosophical Radical".

Mesmerism

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Martineau in her later years.

Martineau edited a volume of Letters on the Laws of Man's Nature and Development, published in March 1851. Its epistolary form is of a correspondence between her and the self-styled scientist Henry G. Atkinson. It expounds the doctrine of philosophical atheism to which she had depicted the course of human belief as tending. The existence of a first cause is not denied, but is declared unknowable, and the authors, while regarded by others as denying it, certainly considered themselves to be affirming the doctrine of man's moral obligation. Atkinson was a zealous exponent of mesmerism. The prominence given to the topics of mesmerism and clairvoyance heightened the general disapproval of the book, which outraged literary London with its mesmeric evolutionary atheism, causing a lasting division between Harriet Martineau and some of her friends.

She contributed regularly to the Daily News from 1852 to 1866, writing sometimes six leaders a week. Her Letters from Ireland, written during a visit to that country in the summer of 1852, appeared in that paper. She was for many years a contributor to the Westminster Review, and was one of the band of supporters whose assistance in 1854 prevented its end.

In the early part of 1855, Martineau was found to be suffering from heart disease. She began to write her autobiography, but her life was prolonged for twenty years. Her two-volume autobiography was published posthumously in 1877.

She cultivated a tiny farm at Ambleside with success, and her poorer neighbours owed much to her. Her busy life bore the consistent impress of two leading characteristics – industry and sincerity.

When Darwin's book The Origin of Species was published in 1859, his brother Erasmus sent a copy to his old flame Harriet Martineau. At age 58, she was still reviewing from her home in the Lake District. From her "snow landscape", Martineau sent her thanks, adding that she had previously praised

"the quality & conduct of your brother's mind, but it is an unspeakable satisfaction to see here the full manifestation of its earnestness & simplicity, its sagacity, its industry, & the patient power by which it has collected such a mass of facts, to transmute them by such sagacious treatment into such portentous knowledge. I should much like to know how large a proportion of our scientific men believe he has found a sound road."

She wrote to her fellow Malthusian (and atheist) George Holyoake enthusing, "What a book it is! – overthrowing (if true) revealed Religion on the one hand, & Natural (as far as Final Causes & Design are concerned) on the other. The range & mass of knowledge take away one's breath." To Fanny Wedgwood she wrote,

"I rather regret that C.D. went out of his way two or three times to speak of "The Creator" in the popular sense of the First Cause.... His subject is the "Origin of Species" & not the origin of Organisation; & it seems a needless mischief to have opened the latter speculation at all – There now! I have delivered my mind."

Economics and social sciences

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As early as 1831, Martineau wrote on the subject "Political Economy" (as the field of economics was then known). Her goal was to popularise and illustrate the principles of laissez faire capitalism, though she made no claim to original theorising.

Martineau's reflections on Society in America, published in 1837, are prime examples of her approach to the area later known as sociological methods. Her ideas in this field were set out in her 1838 book How to Observe Morals and Manners. She believed that some very general social laws influence the life of any society, including the principle of progress, the emergence of science as the most advanced product of human intellectual endeavour, and the significance of population dynamics and the natural physical environment.

Auguste Comte coined the name sociology and published a rambling exposition under the title of Cours de Philosophie Positive in 1839. Martineau undertook a translation that was published in two volumes in 1853 as The Positive Philosophy of Auguste Comte (freely translated and condensed by Harriet Martineau). It was a remarkable achievement, but a successful one. Comte recommended her volumes to his students instead of his own. Some writers regard Martineau as "the first woman sociologist". Her introduction of Comte to the English-speaking world and the elements of sociological perspective in her original writings support her credit as a sociologist.

Self verdict

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Harriet Martineau died at "The Knoll" on 27 June 1876. She left an autobiographical sketch to be published by the Daily News, in which she wrote:

"Her original power was nothing more than was due to earnestness and intellectual clearness within a certain range. With small imaginative and suggestive powers, and therefore nothing approaching to genius, she could see clearly what she did see, and give a clear expression to what she had to say. In short, she could popularize while she could neither discover nor invent."

See also

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Bibliography

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Books by Harriet Martineau

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  • Illustrations of taxation; 5 volumes; Charles Fox, 1834
  • Illustrations of Political Economy; 9 volumes; Charles Fox, 1834
  • Miscellanies; 2 volumes; Hilliard, Gray and Co., 1836
  • Society in America; 3 volumes; Saunders and Otley, 1837; (reissued by Cambridge University Press, 2009; ISBN 9781108003735); Google Books
  • Retrospect of Western Travel; Saunders and Otley, 1838
  • How to Observe Morals and Manners; Charles Knight and Co, 1838; Google Books
  • Deerbrook; London, 1839; Project Gutenberg
  • The Crofton Boys. A Tale; Charles Knight, 1841; Project Gutenberg
  • Eastern Life. Present and Past; 3 volumes; Edward Moxon, 1848
  • Harriet Martineau's Autobiography. With Memorials by Maria Weston Chapman; 2 volumes; Smith, Elder & Co, 1877; Liberty Fund.

Books about Harriet Martineau

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  • Maria Weston Chapman, Autobiography, with Memorials (1877). Virago, London 1983
  • Logan, Deborah Anna (2002). The Hour and the Woman: Harriet Martineau's "Somewhat Remarkable" Life. Northern Illinois University Press. ISBN 0875802974.
  • David, Deeirdre (1989). Intellectual Women and Victorian Patriarchy: Harriet Martineau, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, George Eliot. Cornell Univ Pr. ISBN 0801494141.
  • Rees, Joan. Women on the Nile: Writings of Harriet Martineau, Florence Nightingale, and Amelia Edwards. Rubicon Press: 1995, 2008.
  • Sanders, Valerie (1986). Reason Over Passion: Harriet Martineau and the Victorian Novel. New York: St. Martin's Pr. ISBN 0710810180.

References

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  1. ^ a b Hill, Michael R. (2002) "Harriet Martineau: theoretical and methodological perspectives" Routledge. ISBN 0415945283
  •   Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  • Miller, Fenwick. Harriet Martineau (1884, "Eminent Women Series").
  • Riedesel, Paul L. "Who Was Harriet Martineau?", Journal of the History of Sociology, vol. 3, 1981. pp. 63–80.
  • Webb RK. Harriet Martineau, a radical Victorian, Heinemann, London 1960
  • Weiner, Gaby. "Harriet Martineau: A reassessment (1802–1876)", in Spender, Dale (ed.) Feminist theorists: Three centuries of key women thinkers, Pantheon 1983, pp. 60–74 ISBN 0-394-53438-7

Further reading

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  • Ella Dzelzainis and Cora Kaplan, eds. Harriet Martineau: Authorship, Society, and Empire (Manchester University Press, 2011); 263 pages; essays on her views of race, empire, and history, including the 1857 Indian Mutiny and the Atlantic slave trade.

Primary sources

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  • Logan (Ed.), D. A. (2007). The Collected Letters Of Harriet Martineau. London: Pickering and Chatto. ISBN 9781 85196 804 6.
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Category:1802 births Category:1876 deaths Category:Classical economists Category:Women philosophers Category:Women essayists Category:Women of the Victorian era Category:Deaf writers Category:Atheism activists Category:English atheists Category:English suffragists Category:British people of Huguenot descent Category:English people of French descent Category:People from Ambleside Category:People from Norwich Category:Feminism and history Category:Victorian women writers Category:Works originally published in Once A Week (magazine)