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         Rowson Mrs Susanna:     more detail
  1. Mrs. Susanna Rowson, 1762-1824: An early English-American career-woman by Gertrude J Taylor, 1945
  2. CHARLOTTE TEMPLE:A Tale of Truth. Stereotyped by J. A. James. by Mrs [Susanna (Haswell).1762 - 1824]. Rowson, 1837
  3. In Defense of Women: Susanna Rowson (1762-1824) by Dorothy Weil, 1976-06-01
  4. Charlotte Temple. a tale of truth. by Susanna Haswell Rowson: re by Rowson. Mrs.. 1762-1824., 1905-01-01
  5. Susanna Rowson (Twayne's United States Authors Series) by Patricia L. Parker, 1986-09

1. Susanna Haswell Rowson (1762-1824)
As Susanna Rowson saw it, she was arming young Although in other writings, Rowson warns unmarried girls Temple she clearly approves of Mrs. Beauchamp s kindly
http://www.georgetown.edu/faculty/bassr/heath/syllabuild/iguide/rowson.html
Susanna Haswell Rowson (1762-1824)
Contributing Editor: Laraine Fergenson
Classroom Issues and Strategies
The best approach to Rowson's moralizing and her melodramatic language is to ask students to consider the author's audience and her purpose in writing. As Susanna Rowson saw it, she was arming young women for survival in a perilous world inhabited by seducers, hypocrites, and false friends. The society that forms the background of the novel was dominated by a rigid moral code, and violations of it were dealt with very harshly. Keeping in mind that Rowson intended to reach "the young and thoughtless of the fair sex" (see the "Preface" to Charlotte Temple ), and, if possible, to protect these vulnerable young women from the pain of social rejection, the modern reader can better understand the author's emphatic moralism and melodramatic language. The instructor can initiate a discussion of Rowson's notion of sisterhood, which is adumbrated in this selection. Although in other writings, Rowson warns unmarried girls about associating with women of damaged reputations (lest their own suffer), in Charlotte Temple she clearly approves of Mrs. Beauchamp's kindly regard toward Charlotte, whom she later befriends. It is significant that Mrs. Beauchamp is herself safely married, but she is obviously a foil to La Rue, who, established as Mrs. Crayton, shows detestable hypocrisy in shunning Charlotte as a fallen woman. Rowson's idea that women should take care of each other and not join in heaping insults upon a betrayed sister is similar to ideas in the writings of

2. [Poems, In] A Memoir Of Mrs. Susanna Rowson, With Elegant And
Poems, in A memoir of Mrs. Susanna Rowson, with elegant and illustrative extracts from her writings in prose and poetry. By Elias Nason Susanna Haswell Rowson, 17621824 1762-1824 Susanna
http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://name.umdl.umich.edu/AM0779&y=027CFF4

3. Susanna Rowson
American Literature 17001800 - Susanna Haswell Rowson (1762-1824), PAL (Perspectives in memoir, Elias Nason s Memoir of Mrs. Susanna Rowson (1870), Francis
http://library.marist.edu/diglib/english/americanliterature/col-early-am-authors
Susanna Haswell Rowson (c.1762-1824) Charlotte: A Tale of Truth (also known as Charlotte Temple): Brief Background Notes from Lecture on Rowson Gonzaga University: Professor Donna M. Campbell's page is exactly what it proclaims to be. Useful for both students and faculty.-MJM Charlotte Temple , by Susanna Rowson, Encyclopedia of the Self: Oddly, this site does not contain the text itself but does provide some annotations of key concepts within the novel.-MJM Charlotte Temple , EServer, Carnegie Mellon University: A plain vanilla version of the novel that appears in one long file.-MJM Charlotte Temple (First American Edition) , University of Virginia: This version includes an historical and biographical introduction and bibliography by Francis W. Halsey. Halsey's material includes extensive notes and graphics. The text itself also contains a number of footnotes. Recommended.-MJM EAF Authors: Susanna Haswell Rowson , Early American Fiction, University of Virginia Library: Includes three biographies of the author and a brief introduction.-MJM Early American Literature: 1700-1800 - Susanna Haswell Rowson (1762-1824) , PAL (Perspectives in American Literature: A Research and Reference Guide), California State University at Stanislaus: Paul P. Reuben's useful select bibliography.-MJM

4. Susanna Haswell Rowson (1762-1824)
Susanna Haswell Rowson (17621824) Contributing Editor Laraine Fergenson suffer), in Charlotte Temple she clearly approves of Mrs. Beauchamp's kindly regard toward Charlotte, whom
http://www.georgetown.edu/bassr/heath/syllabuild/iguide/rowson.html
Susanna Haswell Rowson (1762-1824)
Contributing Editor: Laraine Fergenson
Classroom Issues and Strategies
The best approach to Rowson's moralizing and her melodramatic language is to ask students to consider the author's audience and her purpose in writing. As Susanna Rowson saw it, she was arming young women for survival in a perilous world inhabited by seducers, hypocrites, and false friends. The society that forms the background of the novel was dominated by a rigid moral code, and violations of it were dealt with very harshly. Keeping in mind that Rowson intended to reach "the young and thoughtless of the fair sex" (see the "Preface" to Charlotte Temple ), and, if possible, to protect these vulnerable young women from the pain of social rejection, the modern reader can better understand the author's emphatic moralism and melodramatic language. The instructor can initiate a discussion of Rowson's notion of sisterhood, which is adumbrated in this selection. Although in other writings, Rowson warns unmarried girls about associating with women of damaged reputations (lest their own suffer), in Charlotte Temple she clearly approves of Mrs. Beauchamp's kindly regard toward Charlotte, whom she later befriends. It is significant that Mrs. Beauchamp is herself safely married, but she is obviously a foil to La Rue, who, established as Mrs. Crayton, shows detestable hypocrisy in shunning Charlotte as a fallen woman. Rowson's idea that women should take care of each other and not join in heaping insults upon a betrayed sister is similar to ideas in the writings of

5. Charlotte Temple
Charlotte Temple Rowson, Mrs. Susanna (Haswell), 17621824 Mrs. Susanna (Haswell), 1762-1824 Rowson
http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://www.archive.org/texts/texts-details-db.p

6. PROJECT GUTENBERG - Catalog By Author - Rowson, Mrs. Susanna
Etexts by Author. Rowson, Mrs. Susanna Haswell, 17621824 R Index Main Index Charlotte Temple LANGUAGE English SUBJECT
http://www.informika.ru/text/books/gutenb/gutind/TEMP/rowson_mrs_susanna_haswell

7. AAC Database - Browse - List
1, Rowson, Mrs., 17621824. 1, Rowson, Susanna Haswell, 1762-1824 See Rowson,Mrs.,1762-1824. 1, Rowson, William, Mrs., 1762-1824 See Rowson,Mrs.,1762-1824.
http://valeph.tau.ac.il/ALEPH/ENG/TAU/AAC/AAC/SCAN-F/0210770
Sourasky Central Library
Browse - AUTHOR list - ALL DOCUMENTS
The numbers in the list below indicate the number of documents listed under a term.
To display the documents, click on an eye . To move up or down the list, click on the arrow. Rowson, Everett K. Rowson, Mrs., 1762-1824 Rowson, Susanna Haswell, 1762-1824
See: Rowson,Mrs.,1762-1824 Rowson, William, Mrs., 1762-1824
See: Rowson,Mrs.,1762-1824 Rowthorn, Bob Roxan, David Roxan, M. M.
See: Roxan, Margaret M. Roxan, Margaret M. Roxas, Agustin de, 1572-1612?
See: Rojas Villandrando, Agustin de,1572-1612? Roxas, Juan Bartoleme de
See: Rubia Barcia, Jose Roxbee Cox, Jeremy Roxborough, Ian

8. AAC Database - Browse - List
PenningRowsell, Edmund. 3, Rowson, Everett K. 1, Rowson, Mrs., 1762-1824. 1, Rowson, Susanna Haswell, 1762-1824 See Rowson,Mrs.,1762-1824.
http://valeph.tau.ac.il/ALEPH/ENG/TAU/AAC/AAC/SCAN-F/3194877
Sourasky Central Library
Browse - AUTHOR list - ALL DOCUMENTS
The numbers in the list below indicate the number of documents listed under a term.
To display the documents, click on an eye . To move up or down the list, click on the arrow. Rowohlt, Ernst, 1887-1960 Rowold, Katharina Rows, John, 1411?-1491
See: Rous, John,1411?-1491 Rowse, A. L. (Alfred Leslie), 1903- Rowse, Alfred Leslie
See: Rowse, A. L.(Alfred Leslie),1903- Rowse, John, 1411?-1491
See: Rous, John,1411?-1491 Rowse, Tim Rowsell, E. C. Penning-
See: Penning-Rowsell, Edmund Rowsell, Edmund Penning-
See: Penning-Rowsell, Edmund Rowson, Everett K. Rowson, Mrs., 1762-1824 Rowson, Susanna Haswell, 1762-1824
See: Rowson,Mrs.,1762-1824

9. SUSANNA ROWSON
Susanna Rowson (17621824). REFERENCES RWG Vail, Susanna Haswell Rowson; Elias Nason, A Memoir of Mrs. Susanna Rowson, 1870, with portrait; Nat. Cyc.
http://www.niulib.niu.edu/badndp/rowson_susanna.html
Home Information Contents Search ... Links
Rowson, Susanna.
SUSANNA ROWSON (1762-1824) has been able to list 161 editions published before 1932. Mrs. Rowson's husband becoming bankrupt, she, her husband, and her half-sister Charlotte, went on the stage in Edinburgh in the winter of 1792-93. Here Thomas Wignell, the lessee of the Chestnut Street Theatre of Philadelphia, saw them and engaged the three for his productions. They opened at Annapolis, Maryland, and performed in various places during the next two seasons. Mrs. Rowson continued writing, and besides novels produced several plays. In 1796 the Rowsons appeared first in the comic opera "Farmer" in Boston, and later in Sheridan's "School for Scandal" and other plays and operas. On the twelfth of April they appeared in "Americans in England; or, Lessons for Daughters," a play which Susanna had written. In the spring of 1797, Mrs. Rowson left the stage and began a school for girls in Boston, and in 1800 removed to larger quarters five miles outside the city. In addition to teaching, however, Mrs. Rowson also kept up her literary work, and in 1802 was engaged as editor of the Boston Weekly Magazine

10. Lauter Et Al., The Heath Anthology Of American Literature
To Mr. Charles Deighton; Letter LXXIII. To Miss Julia Granby; Letter LXXIV. To Mrs. M. Wharton. Susanna Haswell Rowson (17621824) Charlotte Temple from Preface;
http://college.hmco.com/instructors/catalog/tocs/heath_toc1.html
The Heath Anthology of American Literature, 4/e Paul Lauter, General Editor, Trinity College
Richard Yarborough, Associate General Editor, University of California, Los Angeles
Jackson Bryer, University of Maryland
Anne Goodwyn Jones, University of Florida
King-Kok Cheung, University of California, Los Angeles
Wendy Martin, Claremont Graduate University
Charles Molesworth, Queens College-City University of New York
Raymund Paredes, University of California, Los Angeles
Ivy T. Schweitzer, Dartmouth College
Linda Wagner-Martin, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Andrew O. Wiget, New Mexico State University Sandra A. Zagarell, Oberlin College James Kyung-Jin Lee, Associate Editor, The University of Texas, Austin
Contents
Volume 1
  • Colonial Period: To 1700
    • Native American Oral Literatures
      • Native American Oral Narrative
        • Talk Concerning the First Beginning (Zuni) Changing Woman and the Hero Twins after the Emergence of the People (Navajo) Wohpe and the Gift of the Pipe (Lakota) The Origin of Stories (Seneca) Iroquois or Confederacy of the Five Nations (Iroquois) Iktomi and the Dancing Ducks (Oglala Sioux) Raven Makes a Girl Sick and Then Cures Her (Tsimshian) The Bungling Host (Hitchiti) Creation of the Whites (Yuchi)
        Native American Oral Poetry
        • Zuni Poetry
          • Sayatasha's Night Chant
          Aztec Poetry
          • The Singer's Art Two Songs Like Flowers Continually Perishing (Ayocuan)
          Inuit Poetry
          • Song (Copper Eskimo) Moved (Uvavnuk, Iglulik Eskimo)

11. Rowson, Mrs., 1762-1824. Charlotte Temple (in VSCCAT)
History of Charlotte Temple; Rowson, Mrs., 17621824. Lamentable history of the beautiful and accomplished Charlotte Temple; Rowson, Susanna Haswell, 1762-1824.
http://scolar.vsc.edu/VSCCAT/ACV-2856
Rowson, Mrs., 1762-1824. Charlotte Temple
Heading:
  • Rowson, Mrs., 1762-1824. Charlotte Temple
Used for:
  • Rowson, Mrs., 1762-1824. Charlotte
  • Rowson, Mrs., 1762-1824. History of Charlotte Temple
  • Rowson, Mrs., 1762-1824. Lamentable history of the beautiful and accomplished Charlotte Temple
  • Rowson, Susanna Haswell, 1762-1824. Charlotte Temple
Source data found:
  • Her Charlotte. A tale of truth, 1794: t.p. (Charlotte)
  • Her The history of Charlotte Temple, 1801: t.p. (The history of Charlotte Temple)
  • Her The lamentable history ... 1860: t.p. (The lamentable history of the beautiful and accomplished Charlotte Temple)
  • Click on one the above headings to search automatically for that entry in the catalog
  • Use your web "Back" key/command for previous screen
  • Back up to VSC Library Catalog Search Options
  • 12. Text Details For Charlotte Temple
    Author Rowson, Mrs. Susanna (Haswell), 17621824 Keywords Authors R Rowson, Mrs. Susanna (Haswell), 1762-1824; Titles C ; Literature.
    http://www.archive.org/texts/texts-details-db.php?id=56990

    13. Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg > Authors > R
    Rousseau, JeanJacques, 1712-1778; Rowlandson, Mary White, Ca. 1635-ca. 1678; Rowson, Mrs. Susanna (Haswell), 1762-1824; Roy Benson, Jr.
    http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Au

    14. Penn State Libraries Special Collections Library Finding Aids
    Rowlands, Effie Adelaide, 18661936. Rowson, Mrs, 1762-1824. Rowson, Susanna, SEE Rowson, Mrs. Royden, A. Maude (Agnes Maude), 1876-1956. Rushing, Jane Gilmore.
    http://www.libraries.psu.edu/speccolls/FindingAids/womenauth_r.html

    15. Index
    Translate this page 1678 Gutenberg Rowson, Mrs. Susanna (Haswell), 1762-1824 Gutenberg Rudd, Steele, 1899-1935 AKA Davis, Arthur Hoey, 1899-1935 Gutenberg Rumford, Benjamin, Graf
    http://www.elbooks.sk/angautR.html
    VYH¼ADÁVAÈ E-KNÍH - ANGLICKÉ TITULY - AUTOR - pís. R
    R, Rainer Maria, 1875-1926 Gutenberg
    Rabelais, Francis AKA: Rabelais, Francois, 1483-1553 Gutenberg
    Rabelais, Francois, 1483-1553 AKA: Rabelais, Francis Gutenberg
    Racine, Jean Baptiste, 1639-1699 Gutenberg
    Radcliffe, Ann Ward, 1764-1823 Gutenberg
    Raine, William MacLeod, 1871-1954 Gutenberg
    Raleigh, Walter Alexander, Sir, 1861-1922 Gutenberg
    Ralphson, G. Harvey (George Harvey), 1879- Gutenberg
    Rand, Ayn, 1905-1982 Gutenberg
    Ransome, Arthur, 1884-1967 Gutenberg Raspe, Rudolf Erich, 1737-1794 Gutenberg Rawlinson, George, 1812-1902 Gutenberg Ray, Anna Chapin, 1865-1945 Gutenberg Ray, T. Bronson, 1868- Gutenberg Reade, Charles, 1814-1884 Gutenberg Redgrove, H. Stanley (Herbert Stanley), 1887-1943 Gutenberg Reed, John, 1887-1920 Gutenberg Reed, Myrtle, 1874-1911 Gutenberg Reeve, Arthur B. (Arthur Benjamin), 1880-1936 Gutenberg Reilly, S. A. Gutenberg Retz, Jean François Paul de Gondi de, 1613-1679 Gutenberg Reu, Johann Michael, 1869-1943, Editor Gutenberg Reynolds, John N. Gutenberg Reynolds, Joshua, Sir, 1723-1792 Gutenberg Rhodius, Apollonius, c. 3rd cent. B.C.-

    16. Index
    Chaperon, The, by James, Henry, 18431916 Character, by Smiles, Samuel, 1812-1904 Charlotte Temple, by Rowson, Mrs. Susanna (Haswell), 1762-1824 Charmed Life, A
    http://www.elbooks.sk/angdieloC.html
    VYH¼ADÁVAÈ E-KNÍH - ANGLICKÉ TITULY - Dielo - pís. C CIA World Factbook (1990), by United States. Central Intelligence Agency
    CIA World Factbook (1991), by United States. Central Intelligence Agency

    CIA World Factbook (1992), by United States. Central Intelligence Agency

    CIA World Factbook (1993), by United States. Central Intelligence Agency
    ...
    Cyropaedia: the education of Cyrus, by Xenophon, 431-355 BC

    17. American Poetry - Revolutionary Period
    sive Cambromyomachia the mousetrap Albany WC Little, 1840. Rowson, Susanna Haswell (1762-1824) Poems, in A memoir of Mrs. Susanna Rowson Albany Joel
    http://library.stanford.edu/depts/hasrg/hdis/ampo2_toc.html
    skip to main navigation Articles A-Z Humanities and Area Studies Engineering Social Sciences Interdisciplinary Government Numeric Data Archive of Recorded   Sound Biology (Falconer) Bing Wing Business (Jackson)   Eng.(Swain) Earth Sciences   (Branner) East Asia Education   (Cubberley) Engineering Government Docs.   (Jonsson) Green Library Hoover Institution Information Center Lane Reading   Room Law (Crown) Map Collections Marine Biology   (Miller)   Sciences Media and   Microtext Medical (Lane) Meyer Music Physics Special Collections Social Science Social Science   Resource Center Stanford Auxiliary   Library SLAC Library HUMANITIES DIGITAL INFORMATION SERVICE Text American Poetry Text ... About HDIS
    The Chadwyck-Healey
    American Poetry Database
    Table of Contents: Revolutionary Era, 1766-1799

    18. Index
    Rowlandson, Mary White (16371711) Narrative of the Captivity and Removes of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson Rowson, Susanna (1762-1824) Charlotte Temple Rudd, Steele
    http://www.eshunet.com/list1/en3000/titles/index-r.htm
    English Classics 3000 R ( Listed by Author )
      Rabelais, Francis (1494- ca.1553)
        Gargantua and Pantagruel
          Racine, Jean Baptiste (1639-1699)
            Phaedra

          Radcliffe, Ann Ward (1764-1823)
          The Mysteries of Udolpho Rae, John (1796-1872)
            New Principles on the Subject of Political Economy

          Raleigh, Walter (1861-1922)
            The Discovery of Guiana
            Robert Louis Stevenson
            Style

          Ralphson, G. Harvey (1879- )
            Boy Scouts in Mexico, or, On Guard with Uncle Sam

          Raspe, Rudolph Erich (1737-1794)
          The Surprising Adventures of Baron Munchausen Rawle, William (1759-1836)
            A View of the Constitution of the United States of America

          Ray, Anna Chapin (1865-1945)
          On The Firing Line Reade, Charles (1814-1884) Christie Johnstone
            The Cloister and the Hearth Foul Play Hard Cash Peg Woffington Put Yourself in His Place A Simpleton White Lies A Woman-Hater
          Redgrove, H. Stanley (1887-1943)
            Bygone Beliefs
          Reed, Myrtle (1874-1911)
            Lavender and Old Lace
          Reeve, Arthur B. (1880-1936)
            The Poisoned Pen The Silent Bullet
          Retz, Cardinal de (1613-1679) The Memoirs of Cardinal de Retz Reynolds, Joshua, Sir (1723-1792)

    19. Chadwyck-Healey American Poetry Database: SETIS - University Of Sydney Library
    Rowson, SH (17621824) A present for young ladies (1811); Rowson, SH Miscellaneous poems 1817); Rowson, SH Poems, in A memoir of Mrs. Susanna Rowson (1870
    http://setis.library.usyd.edu.au/ampoetry/wobrow.html
    Browse the American Poetry Database: Women Poets
    New Search
    Browse Poets Database Guide Setis Home ...
  • Woolson, C. F.: [Poems, in] Five generations [1931]
  • 20. Lynda Williams
    Then, in the writing of Susanna Rowson (17621824), we see a later version of the working out To explain, Rowson’s description of Mr. and Mrs. Temple make
    http://www.cl.uh.edu/itc/course/LITR/5535/mt02wmsly.htm
    LITR 5535 American Romanticism UHCL, summer 2002 Student Midterm Lynda Williams Dr. Craig White Literature 5535 13 June 2002 Desire and Loss: The American Experience Initially, the American Romantic writers seem to mark a complete reversal of thought in comparison to the times that preceded them, appearing on the stage as a new group that has flung aside all the stifling trappings of the Old World. Indeed, the Romantic evokes the image of a contentious teenager rebelling against stodgy parents, specifically in this case, the Neoclassicists. And, in many respects, that observation certainly has some validity as the Romantics do indeed take many of the tenets of Neoclassicism and substitute opposite values; for example, the Romantics value emotion over reason, the worth of the individual over the general, and the environs of nature over those of the city. However, the Romantics do not disregard the past completely, a point that becomes more and more evident as one reads the writers that preceded them. The theme of desire and loss, a theme that dominates American Romantic literature and also later American thought, has its roots in its forebears. One need only read early American writings, beginning with Christopher Columbus’s letters, to see this theme in full flower.

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