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Story of a Modern Woman (Version 2)

“The Story of a Modern Woman” (1894) is a work of feminist social realism. In its time it was one of the most famous and influential novels to grow out of and shape the “New Woman” movement of the 1890s. It won such attention for its author that Ella Hepworth Dixon was given the nickname “The New Woman.” The story of the novel’s protagonist, Mary Erle, loosely follows the outline of Dixon’s own situation. As the well-educated daughter of a public intellectual, she enters the world of professional writing after his death, partly trading on his name. Victorian society had been distinctly patriarchal, and women were expected to find their places under the protection of men, traditionally defining themselves as wives and mothers. However, by the 1890s, an alarming “surplus” of unmarried women in Britain meant that many had statistically little chance of becoming anyone’s wife or mother, and must create for themselves other paths to meaningful existence. This new reality demanded a more complex understanding of life, with storylines more nuanced than the old “find-a-husband” fiction of earlier decades. “The Story of a Modern Woman” was published first in serial form, then released in the UK and the USA in two editions with some differences in the selection and arrangement of material. This LibriVox recording is based on the American edition. - Summary by Bruce Pirie (7 hr 16 min)

Chapters

An End and a Beginning

A Child

Wonderings

A Young Girl

Alison

Mary's Lover

The Central London School of Art

A Kettledrum at Lady Jane's

Mary Tries to Live Her Life

New Hopes

In Grub Street

The Woman Waits

The Man Returns

The Apotheosis of Perry Jackson

Mary Goes Out on a Wet Day

A Comedy in Real Life

Two Ultimatums

Number Twenty-seven

Dunlop Strange Makes a Mistake

Alison Arranges a Match

The Gate of Silence

The World Wags On

In Which Civilization Triumphs

The Woman in the Glass