154:. Mozley's work consisted of inserted essays between lead articles that focused on social values and human behavior. She strove to get her work known, but preferred to have it published anonymously because of the ease and freedom of expression that she felt came with anonymity. She also felt that the public did not accept the writing of women and therefore did not want her sex to be revealed with her work. Conversely it was Mozley's review of
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Mozley argues that women are just as ingenious and capable as men are when it comes to writing and publishing. She believes that there are two different types of women that exist; the clever woman and the ideal woman. The clever woman uses logic and gains intellect by focusing on her own needs. The
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In many of Mozley's reviews and editorials, she aimed to show women's capability in a feminine and domestic aspect rather than a brilliant one. She also wanted to prove women's courage and intelligence because they were normally defined by their boring and bland duties of everyday life. During the
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Mozley continued to write and publish works until her death in 1891. She became blind two years before her death. However, she was remembered for her many writings, particularly because her sister Fanny republished many of her earlier essays that had been published without attribution. Computer
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ideal woman, on the other hand, bases thought on intuition and not reason. The ideal woman tends to, therefore, fall obedient to male power. Her main argument, seen through her own work, is that writing should be an occupation for women as well as men so that they can make a living off of it.
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where she was educated at home. Mozley was known as an educated and religiously interested individual. After taking over her brother Thomas's house, she dedicated her time to literary and written works, many of which she published between 1843 and 1849. She then edited books for the
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The first time Mozley's work came out under her own name was when she edited her brother's and Newman's works. After this she also edited and wrote for
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Women
Reviewing Women in Nineteenth-Century Britain: Critical Reception of Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë and George Eliot
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Ellen Jordan, ‘Mozley, Anne (1809–1891)’, Oxford
Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
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time period of Mozley's writing career, women were characterized by their commitment to their husbands.
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analysis has identified further works which were known to exist but could not be otherwise identified.
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into a family of established book-sellers, publishers and printers, including her brothers
69:(17 September 1809 – 27 June 1891) was a British writer and critic. She lived in
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Sister as
Journalist: The Almost Anonymous Career of Anne Mozley
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Dictionary of
National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume 39. p. 249.
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that first recognised that it had to be written by a woman.
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Women
Reviewing Women in Nineteenth-Century Britain
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303:Letters and correspondence of
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189:Albert Frederick Pollard.
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146:Christian Remembrancer
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124:Major works
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