Benigna Machiavelli

Benigna Machiavelli

by Charlotte Perkins Gilman

12 chapters5h 48mEnglish1914

About this book

In between "The Yellow Wallpaper" (1892) and Herland (1915), feminist Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1860-1935) wrote and published this delightful fictional autobiography, Benigna Machiavelli (1914), in her monthly magazine, The Forerunner. The narrator, young Benigna MacAvelly, decides as a child that she intends to emulate her ancestor Niccolò Machiavelli but dedicate her machinations to doing good rather than evil. She starts her ingenious plotting very early in life (for example, as an 11-year-old, she enlists her classmates in an elaborate money-raising scheme to buy a new watch for an impoverished teacher), and moves on to larger goals as she gets older. Her most significant challenge is her domineering father. Determined to liberate her downtrodden mother from his verbal abuse, Benigna concocts an elaborate plan to deal with him and restore her mother's self-confidence. (Summary by Winnifred Assmann)

Chapters (12)

1Chapter I
1778
2Chapter II
1840
3Chapter III
1643
4Chapter IV
1868
5Chapter V
1662
6Chapter VI
2028
7Chapter VII
1771
8Chapter VIII
1713
9Chapter IX
1686
10Chapter X
1733
11Chapter XI
1746
12Chapter XII
1454

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