
Title
- Twayne’s English Authors Series ; TEAS 521
Attribution
Kim WalkerPublication Details
BookTwayne Publishers1996Availability
LOCATION CALL # STATUS (UPPER LEVEL) PR113 .W35 1996 AVAILABLE New Feature: Text this to your cellphone
View record in LOLA catalogDescription
Each volume features: A critical, interpretive study and explication of the author’s works A brief biography of the author An accessible chronology outlining the life, work, and relevant historical background of the author Aids for further study — complete notes and references, a selected annotated bibliography, and an index A readable style presented in a manageable length (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)Subject
- Pembroke, Mary Sidney Herbert, — Countess of, — 1561-1621 — Criticism and interpretation
- Cary, Elizabeth, — Lady, — 1585 or 6-1639 — Criticism and interpretation
- Wroth, Mary, — Lady, — ca. 1586-ca. 1640 — Criticism and interpretation
- English literature — Women authors — History and criticism
- English literature — Early modern, 1500-1700 — History and criticism
- Women and literature — England — History — 16th century
- Women and literature — England — History — 17th century
- Renaissance — England
Places in this work
Notes
- Did women have a Renaissance? Over the last decade much of the most eminent and significant scholarship in Renaissance studies has attempted to answer this question. Kim Walker’s Women Writers of the English Renaissance takes a commanding lead among the responses. In a careful, current, and wide-ranging survey of Renaissance women writers, Walker examines the social, educational, economic, and ideological constraints under which women wrote; their attempts to move from the margin to the center of literary production; and their establishment of careers as professional writers. Both major and minor writers - poets, diarists, letter writers, romance writers, playwrights, and biographers - are discussed here in revealing, reliable, and provocative ways. Major writers including Mary Sidney, Elizabeth Cary, and Mary Wroth are presented in a new, more broad perspective. Walker’s synthesis of cultural history and literary criticism makes this volume a significant accomplishment that should be read by every scholar and student of the culture and literature of Tudor and Stuart England
Contents
- Ch. 1. Wise Virgins: Authority and Authorship
- Ch. 2. "Busie in my Clositt": Letters, Diaries, and Autobiographical Writing
- Ch. 3. Negotiating a Place in "Eruditions garden"
- Ch. 4. "Some inspired stile": Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke
- Ch. 5. "This worke of Grace": Elizabeth Middleton, Alice Sutcliffe, Rachel Speght, and Aemilia Lanyer
- Ch. 6. "By publike language grac’t": Elizabeth Cary, Lady Falkland
- Ch. 7. "To beg their fees": The Emergence of the Professional Woman Writer
- Ch. 8. "This strang labourinth": Lady Mary Wroth
- Ch. 9. "The lasting lampe"
ISBN
- 0805770178
LCCN
Open Library ID
-

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