Catherine · Maria · Sedgwick's New England story and Leslie - I hope that the opportunities for women to openly share their opinions throughout the 19th century are limited. Catherine Maria Sedgwick is the first writer in America of wholesale watch history and other novels. Much of her work involves the role of white women in society, especially family worship and genuine women.
Sedgwick was quickly recognized as one of the writers who created Native American literature. The subtitles of "New England Story" are "Sketch of New England Characters and Etiquette", her novel "Leslie", between Puritan and Lynn Woods, or since the 1960s. During the revolution, the novel mixed with historical events. The central character of Sedgwick 's novel is a woman and is known for being independent. In Abu Dhabi, 'the weak and suppressed natural protector' saved the girl from among the shakers. After the Revolutionary War, she decided to be single because she was "filled with an independent spirit of the times, so that I do not agree to abandon my rights."
In her work, Catherine Sedgwick showed consistent tolerance to minority members. The main character of her first novel "New England Story" (1822) is Quaker. A small part of Redwood (1824) was involved in the shaker community, and Sedgwick analyzed the psychological pressure to keep members in groups, but religion was never criticized. Likewise, Leslie (1827) is expected to show a sympathetic understanding of Native American and its religious beliefs.
From the 1920s to the 1850s, Catherine Sedgwick had a great demand and led a good life to short stories written in various journals. As a boyhood novel, a moral story, a family literature, and countless novel writers, Sedgwick says New England before her novel "Hope Leslie" (her most popular work) I am a respected person. Literary figures. In her work, Catherine Sedgwick showed consistent tolerance to minority members. The main character of her first novel "New England Story" (1822) is Quaker. A small part of Redwood (1824) was involved in the shaker community, and Sedgwick analyzed the psychological pressure to keep members in groups, but religion was never criticized. Likewise, Leslie (1827) is expected to show a sympathetic understanding of Native American and its religious beliefs.