Prelude
I: Surrey
1: The town: 'peaceable neighbours who are willing to live
quietly'
2: The women: 'they workt for me'
3: The births: 'a Fact of which there was no Instance in
Nature'
II: London
4: The bagnio: 'several persons of distinction'
5: Confession: 'I was loath She should touch me'
6: The punishment: 'some judge very hard of ye poor woman'
III: The public
7: The press: a 'filthy story at best'
8: Body politics: 'the beautiful uniform Order'
9: Afterlife: 'The Impostress Rabbett breeder'
Karen Harvey is Professor of Cultural History at the University of Birmingham. She studied at the University of Manchester and Royal Holloway, University of London and is the author of several works on eighteenth-century Britain. Her books include The Little Republic Masculinity and Domestic Authority in Eighteenth-Century Britain(OUP, 2012), and Reading Sex in the Eighteenth Century Bodies and Gender in English Erotic Culture (CUP, 2008).
The story is told well, and its different dimensions all carefully
analysed
*Mark Knights, Cultural and Social History*
In a captivating new interpretation, Karen Harvey takes on the
well-known tale of Mary Toft giving birth to rabbits and resituates
it, bringing considerable erudition, empathy, and energy to the
task.
*Linda A. Pollock, Early Modern Women: An Interdisciplinary
Journal*
[Harvey's] book provides fascinating insights into the social
context surrounding the "Rabbit Woman" case while never losing
sight of what remains a rattling good story - a potboiler
indeed.
*Wendy Moore, The Guardian*
The cultural historian Karen Harvey returns [Mary Toft] to the
centre of her own story - and, through her, examines the place of
poor women in the 18th century ... Harvey deserves credit for the
immense amount of research that has produced what feels like a
definitive account ... there is much to be said for the timeliness
of this story about credulity and hysteria in the age of
science.
*Robert Leigh-Pemberton, The Daily Telegraph*
The Imposteress Rabbit Breeder is a cracking read of a story that
seems impossible to believe but it was all too true.
*Paul Donnelley, The Express*
[An] amply detailed study ... Harvey fills out the case
fascinatingly, to create a view of the country and city in a
shifting era ... her extraordinary narrative will surely be
savoured by a wide audience.
*Christopher Hawtree, The Spectator*
Harvey's clear-eyed authority and strenuous examination of Toft's
story lays bare a fascinating moment in English society.
*Tanya Sweeney, The Irish Independent*
The book's neat and rigorous analysis provides a thought-provoking
glimpse into the England of 1726. It is also, rightly, an effort to
restore some dignity to the woman at the centre of the story.
*Louise Perry, Standpoint*
Powerful and detailed ... The Imposteress Rabbit Breeder is an
engaging and emotive volume, capturing an extraordinary event from
the early Georgian era. It should appeal to anyone with an interest
in this period, but its broad scope and thorough analysis suggest
it will find a much wider readership.
*All About History*
[The Imposteress Rabbit Breeder] is absolutely superb. It's one of
the best microhistories that I've read.
*James Daybell, Histories of the Unexpected*
Harvey's account of Mary Toft's "births" and their social, medical
and cultural contexts, is an excellent demonstration of modern
historical scholarship: scrupulously researched from a wide variety
of sources, but empathetic in its delivery and tone. It is also an
exemplary model for what can be achieved when seemingly anomalous
events are examined by way of a deeper dive into their wider social
and cultural contexts.
*Ross MacFarlane, The Fortean Times*
[Harvey] has quarried out information about the culture at the time
- the medical world, the world of rich courtiers and noblemen, the
condition of the poor both male and female. It is rich in footnotes
and in the specialized language of cultural studies ... The story
still fascinates.
*Celia Haddon, The Salisbury Review*
Harvey's remarkable achievement is to have gripped our attention
with this extraordinary but true story.
*Anthony Fletcher, History*
Harvey offers [...] a new and valuable perspective from which
scholars with interests in histories of midwifery, medicine, and
gender will gain a great deal ... Harvey's deliberate and
well-calculated focus on questions of town and country, man and
woman, practitioner and patient is a key strength of this book, and
one which changes our perspective on a story we thought we knew
well. Accessible and enjoyable for scholars, students, and the
public, this book is a valuable and insightful addition to any
bookshelf.
*Dr Ashleigh Blackwood, De Partu (History of Midwifery and
Childbirth Research Group)*
A fantastically rich and beautifully executed book.
*Helen Berry, author of Orphans of Empire: The Fate of London's
Foundlings*
Harvey uses the famous rabbit birth fraud to train a light on
country, town and city, social divisions, female touch and
patriarchal power, medicine, the law and politics - and at the
heart of it all a piteous woman testifying to her bodily sufferings
and visceral losses. A detective story in the noble tradition of
Natalie Zemon Davis' The Return of Martin Guerre.
*Amanda Vickery, author of Behind Closed Doors: At Home in Georgian
England*
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