'Grossly Material Things'
Title | 'Grossly Material Things' PDF eBook |
Author | Helen Smith |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 271 |
Release | 2012-05-03 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN | 0199651582 |
Virginia Woolf described fictions as 'grossly material things', rooted in their physical and economic contexts. This book takes Woolf's hint as its starting point, asking who made the books of the English Renaissance. It recovering the ways in which women participated as co-authors, editors, translators, patrons, printers, booksellers, and readers.
A Concise Companion to Shakespeare and the Text
Title | A Concise Companion to Shakespeare and the Text PDF eBook |
Author | Andrew R. Murphy |
Publisher | John Wiley & Sons |
Pages | 281 |
Release | 2010-03-08 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1444332058 |
A Concise Companion to Shakespeare and the Text introduces the early editions, editing practices, and publishing history of Shakespeare’s plays and poems, and examines their influence on bibliographic studies as a whole. The first single-volume book to provide an accessible and authoritative introduction to Shakespearean bibliographic studies Includes a helpful introduction, notes on Shakespeare’s texts, and a useful bibliography Contributors represent both leading and emerging scholars in the field Represents an unparalleled resource for both students and faculty
Economic Imperatives for Women's Writing in Early Modern Europe
Title | Economic Imperatives for Women's Writing in Early Modern Europe PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | BRILL |
Pages | 272 |
Release | 2018-10-22 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 9004383026 |
Economic Imperatives for Women’s Writing in Early Modern Europe addresses the central question of the professionalization of women’s writing before the eighteenth-century from a comparatist perspective, offering intriguing case studies on as yet an underdeveloped area in early modern studies.
Gender, Authorship, and Early Modern Women’s Collaboration
Title | Gender, Authorship, and Early Modern Women’s Collaboration PDF eBook |
Author | Patricia Pender |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 299 |
Release | 2017-11-10 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 3319587773 |
This book explores the collaborative practices – both literary and material – that women undertook in the production of early modern texts. It confronts two ongoing methodological dilemmas. How does conceiving women’s texts as collaborations between authors, readers, annotators, editors, printers, and patrons uphold or disrupt current understandings of authorship? And how does reconceiving such texts as collaborative illuminate some of the unresolved discontinuities and competing agendas in early modern women’s studies? From one perspective, viewing early modern women’s writing as collaborative seems to threaten the hard-won legitimacy of the authors we have already recovered; from another, developing our understanding of literary agency beyond capital “A” authorship opens the field to the surprising range of roles that women played in the history of early modern books. Instead of trying to simply shift, disaggregate or adjudicate between competing claims for male or female priority in the production of early modern texts, Gender, Authorship, and Early Modern Women’s Collaboration investigates the role that gender has played – and might continue to play – in understanding early modern collaboration and its consequences for women’s literary history.
Material Cultures of Early Modern Women's Writing
Title | Material Cultures of Early Modern Women's Writing PDF eBook |
Author | P. Pender |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 230 |
Release | 2015-12-04 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1137342439 |
This collection examines the diverse material cultures through which early modern women's writing was produced, transmitted, and received. It focuses on the ways it was originally packaged and promoted, how it circulated in its contemporary contexts, and how it was read and received in its original publication and in later revisions and redactions.
Memory and the English Reformation
Title | Memory and the English Reformation PDF eBook |
Author | Alexandra Walsham |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 465 |
Release | 2020-11-12 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1108829996 |
Recasts the Reformation as a battleground over memory, in which new identities were formed through acts of commemoration, invention and repression.
Word of Mouth
Title | Word of Mouth PDF eBook |
Author | Patricia L. Moran |
Publisher | University of Virginia Press |
Pages | 236 |
Release | 1996 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 9780813916750 |
Word of Mouth focuses on the two most prominent women in British modernism, Virginia Woolf and Katherine Mansfield. Both wrote with an extraordinary and sometimes celebratory self-consciousness about their status as "women writers". At odds with their explicit privileging of female difference, however, are patterns of imagery that demonstrate self-revulsion and self-hatred, the woman writer's rejection of herself. Patricia Moran points out that strategies of resistance and challenge are also strategies of repudiation and revulsion directed at female embodiment. Word of Mouth reevaluates Mansfield and Woolf, focusing on the figures of the anorexic and the hysteric and on the extensive imagery of eating, feeding, starvation, suffocation, flesh, and longing that permeates both fictional and nonfictional texts; it locates this writing within the overlapping frames of psychoanalytic theory, studies of women and eating disorders, and feminist work on women's anxiety of authorship.