Elizabeth Inchbald was arguably one of the most important literary figures working in Britain in the early Romantic period, but the complexity of her career has been obscured both by the hybridity of her output and by the recent unavailability of key texts. Shawn Lisa Maurer's edition of Nature and Art brings a crucial, yet troubling, work to a wider reading public. Her superb introduction and the edition's contextual materials open up the novel's political imperatives without closing down some of its more difficult elements. This edition is certain to spark further re-evaluation of the place of feminist practice in Romantic studies and of Inchbald's place in British culture. - Daniel O'Quinn, University of Guelph
With this impressively researched and compellingly introduced edition, Shawn Lisa Maurer secures Nature and Art's important place in late eighteenth-century thought. This edition is to be commended for its expertly chosen contextual materials, which position Nature and Art within crucial debates concerning education and politics and also provide contemporary accounts of Sierra Leone and examples of critical responses to the novel and Inchbald. Maurer makes the ideological concerns and aesthetic delights of this novel clear; it is essential reading for students of the novel, the eighteenth century, gender studies, and philosophical and political literature. - Cheryl Nixon, University of Massachusetts Boston