1st Edition

The Forgotten Alcott Essays on the Artistic Legacy and Literary Life of May Alcott Nieriker

Edited By Azelina Flint, Lauren Hehmeyer Copyright 2022
256 Pages 3 Color Illustrations
by Routledge

256 Pages 3 Color Illustrations
by Routledge

256 Pages 3 Color Illustrations
by Routledge

This collection is the first academic study of the captivating life and career of expatriate artist, writer, and activist, May Alcott Nieriker. Nieriker is known as the sister of Louisa May Alcott and model for "Amy March" in Alcott’s  Little Women. As this book reveals, she was much more than "Amy"—she had a more significant impact on the Concord community than her sister and later became part... Read more

Introduction by Azelina Flint

Part I The Forgotten Alcott

Chapter 1 "Concordia’s Queen": May Alcott and the Town of Concord by Daniel Shealy

Chapter 2 "Successive chapters in a romance": May Alcott Nieriker’s Influence on the Development of the Woman Artist in Louisa May Alcott’s Fiction by Azelina Flint

Chapter 3 "Little Rafael"--May Alcott Nieriker’s Beginnings--A Biographical Sketch by Susan Bailey

Part II The Ex-Patriot

Chapter 4 Armed with a Brush: May Alcott Nieriker as a Representative Woman Artist in Paris by Lauren Hehmeyer

Chapter 5 Alone Together in Paris: May Alcott Nieriker and Rosa Peckham Danielson by Amanda C. Burdan

Chapter 6 Republics Abroad: The Art and Politics of Margaret Fuller and May Alcott Nieriker in Nineteenth Century Europe by Ariel Clark Silver

Part III The Writer

Chapter 7 "Disciplinary Conversations": May Alcott Nieriker’s "An Artist’s Holiday" by Marlowe Daly-Galeano

Chapter 8 An Ideal Life: May Alcott Nieriker, Tourism, and Life Abroad by Kristi Lynn Martin

Part IV The Artist

Chapter 9 "Let the World Know You Are Alive" May Alcott Nieriker and Louisa May Alcott Confront Nineteenth-Century Ideas about Women’s Genius by Lauren Hehmeyer

Chapter 10 Black Subjectivity in the Life and Art of May Alcott Nieriker by Julia K. Dabbs

Chapter 11 "The Pure Hope of Giving … Pleasure": May Alcott, John Ruskin, and the Moral Aesthetic by John Matteson

Part V Legacies

Chapter 12 The "Precious Legacy" of May Alcott Nieriker: Her Paintings and her Child by Jan Turnquist

Conclusion No Longer Forgotten by Lauren Hehmeyer

Biography

Azelina Flint is a Lecturer in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Creative Writing at Lancaster University. Her first book, The Matrilineal Heritage of Louisa May Alcott and Christina Rossetti, was supported by the Fulbright American Studies Fellowship and recovers the influence of Alcott’s and Rossetti’s mothers and sisters on their work. It appears in Routledge’s Studies in Nineteenth Century Literature (2020). Azelina has published articles on the Alcotts in Comparative American Studies and Horror Studies (forthcoming). She organized the first international conference on May Alcott Nieriker at Université Paris Diderot in 2018.  

Lauren Hehmeyer is retired from Texarkana College. She has published in the fields of library science, education, and literature and received multiple grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities. She presented at the Thoreau Bicentennial Celebration in Concord, Massachusetts, and at the "Recovering May Alcott Nieriker" conference in Paris. Her paper on the genius of Louisa May Alcott and May Alcott Nieriker appears in American Studies Journal. Hehmeyer is a popular speaker on both the Alcotts and Thoreau.