Fall River: An Authentic Narrative

Catharine Read Arnold Williams

Fall River: An Authentic Narrative
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Oxford University Press Inc
Country
United States
Published
1 January 1993
Pages
220
ISBN
9780195083590

Fall River: An Authentic Narrative

Catharine Read Arnold Williams

Catharine Williams (1787-1872) lived most of her life in Rhode Island, where she supported herself and her daughter by a productive literary career. Her most compelling work, Fall River, last published in 1833, recreates a notorious incident in the ill-fated town of Fall River, Massachusetts: the trial of a Methodist minister for the murder of a pregnant mill worker whom it was suspected he had seduced. Williams’s investigative report offers a vivid contemporary view of the lives of poor factory girls and of clerical corruption in the industrial towns of early New England. While based in fact, the book raises themes of sexual and religious hypocrisy and exploitation that may be compared with those of novels like The Coquette, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, and The Scarlet Letter. At the same time, the author’s mixture of journalism, biography, fiction, and exhortation makes this authentic narrative an unusual challenge to traditional notions of literary form and yields fresh insights into the nature of early American women’s writing.

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