Anselment,
Raymond. The
Remembrances of Elizabeth Freke, 1671-1771. Cambridge: Cambridge
UP, 2002.
In writing and then rewriting autobiographical
remembrances recalling three decades of marriage and ensuing years
of widowhood, Elizabeth Freke strikingly redefines the relationships
among self, family, and patriarchy characteristic of early modern
women's autobiography. Suffering and sacrifice dominate an extensive
ledger of disappointment and bitterness that reveals over time the
complex emotions of a Norfolk gentry woman seeking significance and
even vindication in her hardships and frustrations. The infirm woman
who eventually found herself utterly alone remained to the end a contentious,
melodramatic, yet formidable figure - a strong-willed, even sympathetic
person intent upon asserting herself against what she perceived as
familial neglect and legal abuse. By making available both versions
of the remembrances in their entirety, this new, multiple-text edition
clarifies the refashioning inherent in each stage of writing and rewriting,
recovering with unusual immediacy Freke's late seventeenth- and early
eighteenth-century domestic world.
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