Harman Patil (Editor)

Emma Brooke

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Occupation
  
writer

Literary movement
  
New Woman

Nationality
  
British

Died
  
1926, Weybridge, United Kingdom

Books
  
A Superfluous Woman, Life the Accuser: A Novel in Two Parts

Emma Brooke or Emma Frances Brooke (1844 – 1926) was a British novelist and a campaigner for the rights of women.

Contents

Life

Brooke was born in Cheshire on 22 December 1844. Her father was a capitalist and she was brought up in Bollington. Her father died in 1872 and with her inheritance she invested it in her own education. She was educated at Newnham College and the London School of Economics. After her left Newnham she returned to Bollington where she lost some of her money. However she remained single and supported herself from her writing.

Her most well known book at the time was the Superfluous Woman. This was called an immoral tale as involved a story where the heroine dies giving birth to a deformed child as the result of marrying an older man who had syphilis. This was the first of her "New Woman" novels. Brooke saw this novel and The Woman Who Did as important in trying to resolved the "Sex Question" which she thought dominated debate in the 1880s. She was annoyed when H. G. Wells reinvented the question when he spoke to the Fabian Society in 1906.

Brooke died at a nursing home in Weybridge in 1926.

Works

  • A Fair Country Maid (1883)
  • Superfluous Woman (1894)
  • Life the Accuser (1896)
  • The Engrafted Rose (1900)
  • Sir Elyot of the Woods (1907)
  • References

    Emma Brooke Wikipedia