Elizabeth Wooster Stuart Phelps

Elizabeth Stuart Phelps
BornAugust 13, 1815 Edit this on Wikidata
Andover, Massachusetts, US
DiedNovember 29, 1852 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 37)
Pen nameH. Trusta
OccupationWriter Edit this on Wikidata
LanguageEnglish language Edit this on Wikidata
Childrenincluding Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward

Elizabeth Wooster Stuart Phelps (1815–1852) was an American writer of religiously themed articles, adult domestic fiction and books for children. She wrote eleven books[1] as well as numerous articles and stories that were translated and published in many languages, and probably many more works that appeared anonymously. Phelps wrote "at the beginning of the transition in American women's writing from domestic sentimentality to regional realism" and was "among the earliest depicters of the New England scene, antedating the regional novels of her Andover neighbor, Harriet Beecher Stowe".[2] In addition to being one of the earliest known authors to have penned a fiction series specifically for girls, her writing also focused on the burdens on women in their restrictive roles as mothers and wives. Her much anthologized 1852 semi-autobiographical short story, "The Angel Over the Right Shoulder", illustrates the repressive burdens frustrating a wife's creative ambitions and need to "cultivate her own mind and heart". The story is notable as "one of the rare woman's fictions of this time to recognize the phenomenon of domestic schizophrenia", says literary critic Nina Baym.[3]

Her only daughter and eldest child, the writer Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward, noted that her creative and talented mother was "torn" by an internal "civil war" between a woman's calling as caretaker of others and as a creative artist and thinker in her own right. "The struggle killed her", reflected Ward, "but she fought till she fell."[4]

  1. ^ "Gale - Product Login".
  2. ^ Mainiero, Lina (1981). American Women Writers from Colonial Times to the Present, Volume 3. Frederick Ungar Publishing Co. pp. 383–384.
  3. ^ Baym, Nina (1993). Woman's Fiction: A Guide to Novels by and about Women in America, 1820–70, 2nd Edition. Chicago: University of Illinois Press. p. 248. ISBN 0-252-06285-X.
  4. ^ Ward, Stuart Phelps, Elizabeth (1896). Chapters from a Life. Houghton Mifflin. pp. 12, 15.