The Hidden Hand
Or, Capitola the Madcap by E. D. E. N. Southworth
Edited by Joanne Dobson
SERIES:
American Women Writers
Rutgers University Press
E.D.E.N. Southworth was one of the most popular and prolific writers of the nineteenth century and her Capitola Black, or Black Cap - a cross-dressing, adventure-seeking girl-woman - was so well-loved that the book was serialized three times between 1859 and 1888 and was dramatized in forty different versions. When we first meet sharp and witty Capitola she is living among beggars and street urchins, and dressed as a boy because a boy can get work and be safe, whereas a girl is left to starve for want of "proper" employment. Unknown to her, Capitola has a very rich elderly guardian who finds her at a providential moment and takes her back to his palatial mansion where she finds herself "decomposing above ground for want of having my blood stirred." But not to fear. There are bandits, true-loves, evil men, long-lost mothers, and sweet women friends in Capitola's future - not to mention thunder storms, kidnap attempts, and duels. The pace is fast, the action wonderfully unbelievable. This is escape literature at its nineteenth-century best, with a woman at its center who makes you feel strong, daring, and reckless.
A startling yarn about cross-gender adventuring
[Southworths] labyrinthine story of kidnap, missing heirs, villians called Black Donald, and Amazon heroinism still entertains. A blend of swashbuckler, Horatio Alger story, domestic sentimentalism, and thriller, her book offers fantasies of feminine invincibility. ... it must hhave titilated many a homebound matron.
The Hidden Hand was a runaway best-seller when it was published in 1859; for years afterward, daring parents named their daughters Capitola, venturous women. ... Fun to read and an excellent text for simultaneously demonstrating the existence of 19th-century literary stereotypes of women and showing how one writer reveled in exploding them.
This comic melodrama draws for its humor and our contemporary interest upon the heroine's cross-dressing and cross-gender identification.
This comic melodrama draws for its humor and our contemporary interest upon the heroine's cross-dressing and cross-gender identification.
The Hidden Hand was a runaway best-seller when it was published in 1859; for years afterward, daring parents named their daughters Capitola, venturous women. ... Fun to read and an excellent text for simultaneously demonstrating the existence of 19th-century literary stereotypes of women and showing how one writer reveled in exploding them.
[Southworths] labyrinthine story of kidnap, missing heirs, villians called Black Donald, and Amazon heroinism still entertains. A blend of swashbuckler, Horatio Alger story, domestic sentimentalism, and thriller, her book offers fantasies of feminine invincibility. ... it must hhave titilated many a homebound matron.
A startling yarn about cross-gender adventuring.
Joanne Dobson teaches creative writing and American literature at Fordham University. She is the author of the Prof. Karen Pelletier academic mystery series and a founding editor of Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Notes to Introduction
Selected Bibliography
A Note on the Text
The Hidden Hand
Explanatory Notes
Introduction
Notes to Introduction
Selected Bibliography
A Note on the Text
The Hidden Hand
Explanatory Notes