Judith Sargent Murray (1751-1820)
Contributing Editor: Amy M. Yerkes
Classroom Issues and Strategies
The central issue that emerges in a first reading of Murray's writings
is the apparent contradiction between her conservative Federalist agenda
and her more liberal platform for feminist reform. Murray maintained that
society must be based on a strict adherence to order--political, social,
family, and personal order--while promoting a change of women's place within
that order. This hierarchical Federalist platform is also in conflict with
Murray's Universalist religious beliefs, which argue for each individual's
ability to establish a direct link with God. By placing her writings within
their historical framework, however, some of this tension can be resolved.
An awareness of the central debates of the early Republic--debates on
the structure and role of government, on the role of women in the new Republic,
on the proper education for the new citizenry--will allow students to appreciate
why Murray's responses to these debates were so complex. Reading the selections
from
The Federalist and
Anti-Federalist Papers, as well as the writings of
John
Adams,
Paine, and
Thomas Jefferson (all
included in the anthology) will help students to understand the historical
framework for Murray's work.
Major Themes, Historical Perspectives, and Personal Issues
In addition to those themes just outlined, Murray was engaged in a struggle
to define and create a truly "American" literature. Students
might therefore examine her choice of subject matter in the essays, her
epilogue to
Tyler's play
The Contrast, and her novel
The Story of Margaretta. While
the latter work has not been included in the anthology, it is available
both on microfilm in the Evans series and in Nina Baym's new edition of
The Gleaner (Union College Press, 1992). Murray's novel continues
her exploration of the role and education of women in the new nation.
Murray was also engaged in a reevaluation of history and subscribed
to the belief that history was fundamentally progressive. By her own commitment
to bettering the education of women and by reevaluating past women's history,
Murray hoped to usher in a "new era in female history."
As with many of her contemporaries, Murray drew heavily from the Enlightenment
philosophy of such writers as John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Her
emphasis on reason as the central governing principle of human beings and
her educational beliefs might be fruitfully compared to those of her European
predecessors.
Significant Form, Style, or Artistic Conventions
Murray's most successful literary work is her
Gleaner essay series;
while the topics of the essays are progressive, the form is rather conventional,
following such famous prototypes as the essays of Addison and Steele. The
development of Murray's persona of Mr. Vigillius, however, is more innovative;
his interaction with the audience, his reporting style, and his personality
allow for interesting discussion.
Other considerations of interest are those of poetic style and her voice
as an essayist. While students may find Murray's poetry and essays stylistically
constrained, she herself insisted that she was primarily interested in
developing a new content for American literature rather than establishing
new literary forms.
Original Audience
Since much of Murray's work was originally printed in journals, any
consideration of audience should address the readers of these periodicals
and the serial nature of the presentation. Furthermore, she was appealing
to a very diverse audience: readers who would adhere to her conservative
Federalist agenda as well as those liberals who were interested in women's
issues. Certainly this wide audience consideration brings with it beliefs
about how to appeal to "male" versus "female" readers
(as de-fined in the late eighteenth century). The ways in which Murray
was trying to subvert the traditional assumptions that linked masculinity
with reason and femininity with passion (the less desirable of the two
traits) would allow for an interesting consideration of audience.
Comparisons, Contrasts, Connections
Murray's writings beg comparison with many of her better-known contemporaries,
and it is astonishing to realize that she preceded many of these contemporaries
in addressing certain issues. For example, her essay
On the Equality
of the Sexes offers an argument very similar to that found in Mary
Wollstonecraft's
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman. Discussion
might also focus on a comparison between Murray's feminist essays and those
of her nineteenth-century American counterparts
Sarah
M. Grimkč and
Elizabeth
Cady Stanton.
Fruitful comparisons can be made between
The Story of Margaretta
and contemporary sentimental novels such as
Hannah
Webster Foster's The Coquette and
Rowson's
Charlotte Temple. Murray's two plays (included in her 1798 collected
edition of
The Gleaner) exhibit an interest in rendering the American
experience--an interest shared by her contemporary
Royall
Tyler, whose play,
The Contrast, also appears in the anthology.
Questions for Reading and Discussion/Approaches to Writing
1. Of particular interest in her essays on the equality and education
of women are the strategies she adopts to prove this equality. Students
might be asked to analyze these strategies and to determine why she adopted
them, given the time when Murray was writing and her Federalist/Universalist
beliefs.
2. Students could explore Murray's guidelines for developing and promoting
American literature (in this case drama) by focusing on the prologues and
epilogues she wrote for well-known American plays.
Note: The questions mentioned above would also serve as helpful writing
assignments and research paper topics.
Bibliography
The only biography of Murray is entitled
Constantia: A Study of the
Life and Works of Judith Sargent Murray, 1751-1820, by Vena Bernadatte
Field (Orono, Maine: University Press, 1931).
A brief but helpful critical evaluation of Murray's essay series is
by Bruce Granger in
American Essay Serials from Franklin to Irving,
Chapter VIII (1978). See also the references to Murray in
Liberty's
Daughters: The Revolutionary Experience of American Women 1750-1800
(Mary Beth Norton, 1980), and
Revolution and the Word: The Rise of the
Novel in America (Cathy Davidson, 1986).
Pattie Cowell offers an insightful overview of Murray's poems in
Women
Poets in Revolutionary America 1650-1775 (1981).
Finally, Nina Baym's introduction to
The Gleaner (Union College
Press, 1992) is of great interest.