Normal View Dyslexic View

Review Article

‘How to Grow Old Gracefully’: Advice, Authority and the Mentor in Women’s Late Life Writing

Open ORCID profile in a new windowAmy CulleyAmy Culley

Amy Culley is Associate Professor in English at the University of Lincoln, UK. Her research interests are in age studies, life writing, and gender in the early nineteenth century. She is the author of British Women’s Life Writing, 1760–1840: Friendship, Community, and Collaboration (Palgrave, 2014). Her research project ‘On Growing Old: Women’s Late Life Writing 1800–1850’ was supported by a British Academy Mid-Career Fellowship (2020) and she has contributed to books and special issues on womens life writing and ageing.

aculley@lincoln.ac.uk

Abstract

This article considers what it meant to grow old gracefully as a woman in Britain in the early nineteenth century by focusing on intergenerational relationships and mentoring. Despite the ambivalent response to the figure of the older woman, her potential as mentor is frequently foregrounded in advice literature in this period. However, in contrast to this prescriptive ideal, the life writing of Lady Louisa Stuart (1757–1851) provides a rare opportunity to explore how older women navigated the culturally ascribed role of mentor. Stuart considers the vexed question of how to grow old gracefully in extensive correspondence with younger women and as a biographer of previous generations. The recovery of Stuart, a writer who barely published during her long lifetime, suggests how women’s late life writing has the potential to complicate cultural narratives of ageing and gender and provide insight into the dynamic relationship between writing and ageing.

Keywords

genderlife writingLady Louisa StuartLady Mary Wortley Montaguold agementorsintergenerational relationships

Related Articles

Thematic article

Normal View Dyslexic View

‘How to Grow Old Gracefully’: Advice, Authority and the Mentor in Women’s Late Life Writing

Open ORCID profile in a new windowAmy CulleyAmy Culley

Amy Culley is Associate Professor in English at the University of Lincoln, UK. Her research interests are in age studies, life writing, and gender in the early nineteenth century. She is the author of British Women’s Life Writing, 1760–1840: Friendship, Community, and Collaboration (Palgrave, 2014). Her research project ‘On Growing Old: Women’s Late Life Writing 1800–1850’ was supported by a British Academy Mid-Career Fellowship (2020) and she has contributed to books and special issues on womens life writing and ageing.

aculley@lincoln.ac.uk