Jane Porter
Jane Porter | |
---|---|
Born | Durham, England, UK | 17 January 1776
Died | 24 May 1850 Bristol, England, UK | (aged 74)
Occupation | Novelist |
Nationality | English |
Citizenship | Kingdom of Great Britain |
Period | 1803–1840 |
Genre | Historical fiction |
Subject | Historical documentary |
Notable works | The Scottish Chiefs |
Jane Porter (3 December 1775 – 24 May 1850) was an English historical novelist, dramatist and literary figure.[1][2] Her bestselling novels, Thaddeus of Warsaw (1803) and The Scottish Chiefs (1810) are seen as among the earliest historical novels in a modern style and among the first to become bestsellers. They were abridged and remained popular among children well into the twentieth century.
Life
[edit]Jane Porter was born in Durham, England, the third of five children of the Irishman William Porter and Jane Blenkinsop Porter of Durham. Tall and beautiful as she grew up, young Jane Porter's grave air earned her the nickname La Penserosa after John Milton's poem Il Penseroso. After her father's death, Jane's family moved to Edinburgh, where she studied at a charity school under the schoolmaster George Fulton. Her family was acquainted with Sir Walter Scott. After stints in Durham and Ireland, the Porter family moved to London in the 1790s, where the sisters entered a circle of famous and future-famous actors, artists, and literary women, including Elizabeth Inchbald, Anna Laetitia Barbauld, Hannah More, Elizabeth Hamilton, Selina Davenport, Elizabeth Benger and Mrs Champion de Crespigny.
Porter's siblings also achieved some fame. Her sister Anna Maria Porter was likewise a novelist. Her brother Sir Robert Ker Porter became a painter.[3]
She died in Bristol at the age of 74.[4]
Works
[edit]Porter is seen to have "crafted and pioneered many of the narrative tools most commonly associated with both the national tale and the historical novel,"[5] though her claims in her lifetime to have done so were often ridiculed and dismissed.[6] Her 1810 work The Scottish Chiefs, about William Wallace, one of the earliest examples of the historical novel,[7] was very successful.[4] The French version was banned by Napoleon. It was said to have influenced Scott and other writers[4] and has remained popular with Scottish children. The Pastor's Fireside (1817) was a story set in the 18th century about the later members of the House of Stuart.[8] Though one of the most popular writers of her time, the profligacy and financial indecisions of her brothers kept her very poor, as she and Anna Maria were constantly obliged to use their incomes to pay off their brothers' debts.[6]
Porter wrote Thaddeus of Warsaw in 1803, set in the late 18th century Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.[4] Despite its success, Porter did not benefit financially, as its copyright was held by its various publishers. To gain income from it, she resorted to ostensibly new editions published with prefaces and minor changes.[9] She applied unsuccessfully for a literary pension, and being personally "totally destitute or nearly so", had to move between homes of her friends.[10]
Porter contributed to periodicals and wrote the play Switzerland (1819), which seems to have been deliberately sabotaged by its lead, Edmund Kean, and closed after its first performance.[11] She is sometimes associated with the 1822 production Owen, Prince of Powys, which closed after only three performances,[8] but this was actually by Samson Penley.[11]
Porter also wrote Tales Round a Winter Hearth (1826) and Coming Out; and The Field of Forty Footsteps (1828) with her sister, Anna Maria.[12] A romance, Sir Edward Seaward's Diary (1831), purporting to record actual circumstances and edited by Jane, was written by her brother, Dr William Ogilvie Porter, as letters in the University of Durham Porter archives show.
In her later years, Porter continued to write pieces for journals. Many appeared anonymously or were simply signed "J. P." Her wide-ranging topics included Peter the Great, Simón Bolívar, and the African explorer Dixon Denham.[13]
Influences
[edit]Porter, like many contemporaries, was fascinated by Lord Byron. The villain in The Pastor's Fireside, Duke Wharton, has been said to cast "an unmistakably Byronic shadow".[14] Additional influences on her writing included her schoolmaster George Fulton, Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene and Sir Philip Sidney's Arcadia.[3][15] She in turn influenced writers in her time.[4]
References
[edit]- ^ Looser, Devoney (2022). Sister Novelists: The Trailblazing Porter Sisters Who Paved the Way for Austen and the Brontës. New York: Bloomsbury. p. 4. ISBN 978-1635575293.
- ^ Todd, Janet, ed. (1989). "Porter, Jane". British Women Writers: a critical reference guide. Routledge. pp. 542–543.
- ^ a b Sutherland, Virginia (2013). "Jane Porter and the Heroic Past". In Otago Students of Letters (ed.). In Her Hand: Letters of Romantic-Era British Women Writers in New Zealand Collections. Dunedin: University of Otago.
- ^ a b c d e MacPherson, Hamish (9 November 2021). "A look into the women of the Scottish Enlightenment". The National. p. 21. Retrieved 22 November 2021.
- ^ McLean, Thomas (2007). "Nobody's Argument: Jane Porter and the Historical Novel". Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies. 7 (2): 88–103. doi:10.2979/JEM.2007.7.2.88.
- ^ a b What'sHerName and Dr. Devoney Looser (2 April 2018). "THE SISTERS: Jane and Anna Maria Porter". What'shername. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
- ^ "Historical novel", The Oxford Companion to English Literature, ed. Margaret Drabble. OUP, 1995, p. 470.
- ^ a b Birch, Dinah, ed. (2011). The Oxford Companion to English Literature. Oxford University Press.
- ^ Looser, Devoney (2010). Women Writers and Old Age in Great Britain, 1750–1850. JHU Press. p. 157. ISBN 978-1-4214-0022-8.
- ^ Looser, Devoney (2010). Women Writers and Old Age in Great Britain, 1750–1850. JHU Press. p. 159. ISBN 978-1-4214-0022-8.
- ^ a b McMillan, Dorothy. "Porter, Jane". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/22571. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ McCalman, Iain, ed. (2009). "Porter, Jane". An Oxford Companion to the Romantic Age. Oxford University Press.
- ^ McLean, Thomas (2009). "Jane Porter's Later Works, 1825-1846". Harvard Library Bulletin. 20 (2): 45–62.
- ^ McLean, Thomas (2012). "Jane Porter and the Wonder of Lord Byron". Romanticism. 18 (3): 250–59. doi:10.3366/rom.2012.0096.
- ^ Kelly, Gary, ed. (2002). Varieties of Female Gothic. Vol. 1. London: Pickering & Chatto.
Literature
[edit]- Devoney Looser: Sister novelists : the trailblazing Porter sisters, who paved the way for Austen and the Brontës, New York; London; Oxford; New Delhi; Sydney: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2022, ISBN 978-1-63557-529-3
External links
[edit]- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 22 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 116.
- Works by Jane Porter at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Jane Porter at the Internet Archive
- Works by Jane Porter at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- "Archival material relating to Jane Porter". UK National Archives.
- Porter Family Collection at the Kenneth Spencer Research Library at the University of Kansas
- Episode on Jane and Anna Maria Porter, with biographer Devoney Looser, at What'sHerName Podcast
Jane Porter biographies
[edit]- 1775 births
- 1850 deaths
- Scottish women novelists
- 19th-century Scottish women writers
- 19th-century British women writers
- Scottish historical novelists
- British women historical novelists
- Women of the Regency era
- Writers from Durham, England
- Writers of historical fiction set in the Middle Ages
- Writers of historical fiction set in the early modern period
- 19th-century Scottish novelists