商品簡介
Women and Epistolary Agency in Early Modern Culture, 1450-1690 is the first collection to examine the gendered nature of womena€?s letter-writing in England and Ireland from the late-Elizabethan period through to the Restoration. The essays collected here represent an important body of new work by a group of international scholars who together look to reorient the study of womena€?s letters in the contexts of early modern culture. The volume builds upon recent approaches to the letter, both rhetorical and material, that have the power to transform the ways in which we understand, study and situate early modern womena€?s letter-writing, challenging misconceptions of womena€?s letters as intrinsically private, domestic and apolitical. The essays in the volume embrace a range of interdisciplinary approaches: historical, literary, palaeographic, linguistic, material and gender-based. Contributors deal with a variety of issues related to early modern womena€?s correspondence in England and Ireland. These include womena€?s rhetorical and persuasive skills and the importance of gendered epistolary strategies; gender and the materiality of the letters as a physical form; female agency, education, knowledge and power; epistolary networks and communication technologies. In this volume, the study of womena€?s letters is not confined to writings by women; contributors here examine not only the collaborative nature of some letter-writing but also explore how men addressed women in their correspondence as well as some rich examples how women were constructed in and through the letters of men. As a whole, the book stands as a valuable reassessment of the complex gendered nature of early modern womena€?s correspondence.
作者簡介
James Daybell is Professor of Early Modern British History at the University of Plymouth, UK. Andrew Gordon is Senior Lecturer in English at the University of Aberdeen, Scotland.