An introduction to women writers of the English Renaissance which takes up 44 works, many as thumbnail sketches; shows how women's writing was hampered by the assumption that poets were male, by restriction to pious subject matter, by the doctrine that only silent women are virtuous, by criticism that praised women as patrons or muses and ignored their writing, and above all by crippling educational theories.
Originally published in 1987.
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Autorentext
Elaine V. Beilin
Inhalt
- FrontMatter,
- CONTENTS,
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS,
- INTRODUCTION,
- ONE. Learning and Virtue: Margaret More Roper,
- TWO. A Challenge to Authority: Anne Askew,
- THREE. Building the City: Women Writers of the Reformation,
- FOUR. Piety and Poetry: Isabella Whitney, Anne Dowriche, Elizabeth Colville, Rachel Speght,
- FIVE. The Divine Poet: Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke,
- SIX. The Making of a Female Hero: Joanna Lumley and Elizabeth Cary,
- SEVEN. The Feminization of Praise: Aemilia Lanyer,
- EIGHT. Heroic Virtue: Mary Wroth's Urania and Pamphilia to Amphilanthus,
- NINE. Redeeming Eve: Defenses of Women and Mother's Advice Books,
- AFTERWORD,
- ABBREVIATIONS,
- NOTES,
- LIST OF WORKS BY WOMEN, 1521-1624,
- Index,