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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Amelia_OpieAmelia Opie - Wikipedia

    Amelia Opie (née Alderson; 12 November 1769 – 2 December 1853) was an English author who published numerous novels in the Romantic period up to 1828. A Whig supporter and Bluestocking, [1] [2] Opie was also a leading abolitionist in Norwich, England.

  2. Início da vida e influências. Carreira literária. Seleção de obras. Referências. Bibliografia. Amelia Opie (12 de novembro de 1769 - 2 de dezembro de 1853) foi uma escritora inglesa que publicou numerosos romances no período romântico. Opie foi também uma destacada abolicionista em Norwich, Inglaterra.

  3. 3 de mai. de 2024 · Amelia Opie (born November 12, 1769, Norwich, Norfolk, England—died December 2, 1853, Norwich) was a British novelist and poet whose best work, Father and Daughter (1801), influenced the development of the 19th-century popular novel. Opie was the daughter of a physician.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Learn about Amelia Opie, a prominent figure of the British Romantic movement who wrote novels, poetry, and plays. She was an abolitionist, a Quaker, and a friend of William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft.

  5. Welcome to the revised Amelia Alderson Opie Archive, a site designed to make available the scholarly resources essential for the study of the life and works of Amelia Alderson Opie (1769-1853), a woman writer who has emerged as an important figure in scholarship concerning literary culture in the Romantic and early Victorian periods.

  6. Chronology of Amelia Alderson Opie – The Amelia Alderson Opie Archive. 1769: birth of Amelia Alderson (12 November), only child of James and Amelia (Briggs) Alderson, in Norwich, England. 1784: death of her mother (31 December); at fifteen Amelia enters society and assumes control of her father’s household.

  7. This thesis examines the life and prose works of Amelia Opie. It explores the moral and social ideology of the novels and tales, setting them in the context of Opie's own ideological development as she moves from the radicalism of the 1790s, through a period of intellectual and religious uncertainty to her conversion to Quakerism in 1825.