Margaret Minifie
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Margaret Minifie (15 July 1734 – 11 May 1803) was a "a minor eighteenth-century sentimental novelist""Margaret Minifie." Orlando: Women’s Writing in the British Isles from the Beginnings to the Present. Cambridge UP. Accessed 11 Jun. 2022.
Orlando
whose career has tended to have been overshadowed by that of her sister,
Susannah Gunning Susannah Gunning, ''née'' Minifie (c. 1740 – 28 August 1800 London) was a British writer and novelist. She and her family were the centre of a society scandal in 1791 which revolved around a suitor for her daughter, Elizabeth Gunning (transl ...
. A number of Minifie's works have historically been attributed to Gunning but recently, critics have sought to disentangle their two histories.


Life

Her father was James Minifie (1707–1789), a clergyman of Staplegrove, near Taunton, Somerset, and her mother was Margaret Minifie (1710–1782). Minifie did not marry and, as she was close to her sister, she lived with her and her family for most of her life. She died at age 68 and was buried in Staplegrove, the place of her birth.


Work

Minifie's sister
Susannah ''Susannah'' is an opera in two acts by the American composer Carlisle Floyd, who wrote the libretto and music while a member of the piano faculty at Florida State University. Floyd adapted the story from the Apocryphal tale of Susanna (Book of D ...
was also a writer and the pair collaborated on at least two novels: ''The histories of Lady Frances S— and Lady Caroline S—'' (1763), "a sentimental epistolary novel" which went into a second edition, and ''The Picture'' (1766). Susannah went on to write four more novels but seems to have taken a hiatus from writing once she married John Gunning (died 1797). Two novels published during this period frequently attributed to Susannah, ''The Count de Poland'' (1780) and ''Coombe Wood'' (1783), were "almost certainly" written by Minifie. Minifie had her own hiatus of 20 years, before the publication of her final novel, ''The Union'' (1801). Minifie is one of Dale Spender's "100 good women writers before Jane Austen."


Caricatures

While there seem to be no extant portraits of Minifie, there are a number of caricatures by
James Gilray James Gillray (13 August 1756Gillray, James and Draper Hill (1966). ''Fashionable contrasts''. Phaidon. p. 8.Baptism register for Fetter Lane (Moravian) confirms birth as 13 August 1756, baptism 17 August 1756 1June 1815) was a British list of c ...
and Isaac Cruikshank, stemming from a 1791 scandal involving Minifie's niece, novelist Elizabeth Gunning (1769–1823) (see
Susannah Gunning Susannah Gunning, ''née'' Minifie (c. 1740 – 28 August 1800 London) was a British writer and novelist. She and her family were the centre of a society scandal in 1791 which revolved around a suitor for her daughter, Elizabeth Gunning (transl ...
). Minifie's role in the imbroglio, dubbed the "Gunninghiad" by
Horace Walpole Horatio Walpole (), 4th Earl of Orford (24 September 1717 – 2 March 1797), better known as Horace Walpole, was an English writer, art historian, man of letters, antiquarian, and Whigs (British political party), Whig politician. He had Strawb ...
, remains unknown.Milberger, Kurt Edward, "‘The first impression, you, yourself, will buy’: The Gunninghiad, ''Virginius and Virginia'' and the Art of Scandal at the Minerva Press." ''Romantic Textualities''; Cardiff Iss. 23 (Summer 2020). DOI:10.18573/romtext.71 The caricatures, described by one commentator as "vicious," portray Minifie in an unflattering way as a stereotypical elderly spinster. Cruikshank's piece also takes aim at her profession with its depiction of her seated at a table surrounded by writing paraphernalia and
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, which was consistent with what some of their harsher critics thought of the sisters' literary productions. Margaret Minifie had a long career as a popular novelist, and while she may not generally be considered a significant writer within the literary canon, her career has sparked interest among researchers interested in recovered women writers, popular fiction, sentimental novels, and the reading and publishing culture of the mid- to late eighteenth century.


Bibliography

*With Susannah Gunning, ''The histories of Lady Frances S— and Lady Caroline S—'' (London: Robert and James Dodsley, 1763; 2nd ed. 1765) *With Susannah Gunning, ''The Picture'' (London: Joseph Johnson and Co., 1766) *''Barford Abbey'' (London: Minerva Press, 1768) *''The Cottage'' (Durham & Co., 1769) *''The Hermit: a novel. By Miss Minifie, author of Barford-Abbey, The cottage, &c.'' (Dublin: James William, 1770)WorldCat
/ref> *''The Count de Poland'' (London & Bath: J. Dodsley, R. Baldwin, & Pratt and Clinch, 1780) *''Coombe Wood. A novel: in a series of letters.'' (London: Robert Baldwin I, 1783) *''The Union'' (London: Robert Dutton, 1801)


Etexts

*''Barford Abbey''
Internet Archive
*''Coombe Wood'', Vol. I & Vol. II, Internet Archive


See also

*
List of early-modern British women novelists This is an alphabetical list of female novelists who were active in England and Wales, and the Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland before approximately 1800. '' Nota bene'': authors of novels are the focus of this list, though many of thes ...


Notes


Further reading

*McVitty, Debbie. ''Familiar collaboration and women writers in eighteenth-century Britain: Elizabeth Griffith, Sarah Fielding and Susannah and Margaret Minifie''. D. Phil. University of Oxford, 2008. * {{DEFAULTSORT:Minifie, Margaret 18th-century births 1730s births 1804 deaths 18th-century English writers 18th-century English women writers 18th-century British women writers English novelists British women novelists