A young woman is caught up in her ideas about romance and valor in
this celebrated eighteenth-century parody of Don Quixote
Beautiful and independent, Arabella has been brought up in rural
seclusion by her widowed father. Devoted to reading French romances, the
sheltered young woman imagines all sorts of misadventures that can
befall a heroine such as herself. As she makes forays into fashionable
society in Bath and London, many scrapes and mortifications ensue - all
men seem like predators wishing to ravish her, she mistakes a
cross-dressing prostitute for a distressed gentlewoman, and she risks
her life by throwing herself into the Thames to avoid a potential
seducer. Can Arabella be cured of her romantic delusions? An immediate
success when it first appeared in 1752, The Female Quixote is a
wonderfully high-spirited parody of the style of Cervantes, and a
telling and comic depiction of eighteenth-century English society.
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