[This is] a wonderfully rich and impressive study. It provides an original new assessment of women's public and religious sensibilities, and it also demonstrates convincingly that female religiosity was central to contemporaries' conceptualization of public life.
Kathryn Gleadle, The Journal of British Studies
Madam Britannia is sweeping but only in the best sense of the word. The writing is clear, the ideas relevant, and the research admirable. Such engagement with wide sweeping primary texts is demanding work, and readers will appreciate Major for doing so with such aplomb.
Kathryn Stasio, ABO: Interactive Journal for Women in the Arts
Exceptional scholarship ... Major's strength lies in her nearly exhaustive cataloguing of relevant media ... I will take a moment to celebrate this book as a superb example of a cultural studies approach
Robin Runia, The Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies
This exhaustively researched and heavily annotated study ... goes beyond its precursors and into fascinating new territory ... This is an important book for academics
Michael Wheeler, Church Times
the wide-ranging nature of Emma Major's research and analysis provides rich and convincing evidence of how important this relationship was and will hopefully stimulate further research into other aspects of its complexity. This book makes a very valuable contribution to our understanding of gender, religion and British nationalism in the long eighteenth century and is highly recommended.
Joanna Cruickshank, Archives