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  1. Mary Augusta Ward has 49 books on Goodreads with 5860 ratings. Mary Augusta Ward’s most popular book is Jane Eyre.

  2. 19 de dez. de 2006 · This article analyses the tensions and contradictions in the work of the conservative writer and social reformer, Mary Augusta Ward and her role in the development of a constructive anti-suffragism designated as the ‘forward policy’. Ward's representation of the suffragette in her novel, Delia Blanchflower (1915), is discussed.

  3. Mary Augusta Ward’s “Perfect Economist” and the Logic of Anti-Suffragism. E. Coit. Published 7 December 2015. Economics, Philosophy. ELH. This article exposes the engagement of Mary Augusta Ward’s Marcella (1894) with the emergent academic discipline of economics, drawing connections between Ward’s influential novel and texts by the ...

  4. Robert Elsmere. Title page from the American or Colonial Edition. Robert Elsmere is a novel by Mrs. Humphry Ward published in 1888. [1] It was immediately successful, quickly selling over a million copies and gaining the admiration of Henry James. [2]

  5. 21 de abr. de 2024 · Mary Augusta Ward. (1851–1920) →. sister projects: Wikipedia article, Commons category, quotes, Wikidata item. British novelist and editor; wrote under her married name as Mrs. Humphry Ward, wife of Thomas Humphry Ward; editor of Anti-Suffrage Review. This author wrote articles for the Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition.

  6. Mary Augusta Ward was a British novelist who wrote under her married name as Mrs. Humphry Ward. She was born as Mary Augusta Arnold in Hobart, Tasmania, but she and her family left for England in July 1856, when she was five years old. In April 1872 she married Mr Humphry Ward.

  7. Abstract. Novelist and literary critic Mary Augusta Ward, who published under her married name of “Mrs. Humphry Ward,” was fascinated with the topic of female genius. In her critical introductions to the Haworth edition of The Life and Work of the Sisters Brontë, which she edited in 1899–1900, Ward expresses her “particularly vivid ...