In the wake of his dramatic success,
Bertram(1816), and its spectacularly failed successor,
Fredolfo(1817), Charles Robert Maturin published his fourth novel,
Women; or Pour et Contre(1818). Although it succeeded in its primary objective – meeting the author’s pressing financial need – the novel has often been dismissed, like Maturin’s previous works, as a blatant literary imitation. A critic for the
Monthly Review, for instance, argued that
Women’s lack of success as well as Maturin’s general literary failure could be attributed to his imitation of Sir Walter Scott:
They [Maturin’s unsuccessful literary attempts] are to be traced to the great success of some late Scotish [sic] novels; and in them we see the foundation not only of Zaira’s Irish-gypsey mother, but of
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Citation: Morin, Christina. "Women, or Pour et Contre". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 27 August 2007 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=8857, accessed 23 November 2024.]