A woman's life in mid-eighteenth-century Ireland: The case of Letitia Bushe

Authors
Citation
Sj. Connolly, A woman's life in mid-eighteenth-century Ireland: The case of Letitia Bushe, HIST J, 43(2), 2000, pp. 433-451
Citations number
35
Categorie Soggetti
History
Journal title
HISTORICAL JOURNAL
ISSN journal
0018246X → ACNP
Volume
43
Issue
2
Year of publication
2000
Pages
433 - 451
Database
ISI
SICI code
0018-246X(200006)43:2<433:AWLIMI>2.0.ZU;2-2
Abstract
Letitia Bushe (c. 1705-57), daughter of a minor Irish landowner and one-tim e officeholder, was a member of the intellectual and cultural circle that i ncluded Swift's friend, the letter writer Mary Delany, the 'proto-bluestock ing' Anne Donnellan, and the 'heretic' bishop Robert Clayton. The means by which, as a single woman of independent but limited means, Bushe maintained her position within this circle had elements of informal domestic servitud e. At the same time a cache of unusually intimate letters reveals a determi ned individualist, consciously distancing herself from some of the official pieties of her society, and enjoying a greater freedom of thought, action, and speech than might at first sight have been expected. The letters also document Bushe's intense and tortured relationship with a younger woman, La dy Anne Bligh, an episode which raises important questions about the nature of women's friendships at this time.