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Women writers and public debate in 1...
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Gray, Catharine, (1966-)
Women writers and public debate in 17th-century Britain
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Women writers and public debate in 17th-century Britain/ Catharine Gray.
remainder title:
Women writers and public debate in seventeenth-century Britain
Author:
Gray, Catharine,
Published:
New York :Palgrave Macmillan, : 2007.,
Description:
x, 262 p.
Series:
Early modern cultural studies
Subject:
English literature - Women authors -
Online resource:
access to fulltext (Palgrave)
ISBN:
9780230605565
Women writers and public debate in 17th-century Britain
Gray, Catharine,1966-
Women writers and public debate in 17th-century Britain
[electronic resource] /Women writers and public debate in seventeenth-century BritainCatharine Gray. - 1st ed. - New York :Palgrave Macmillan,2007. - x, 262 p. - Early modern cultural studies.
Includes bibliographical references (P. [225]-247) and index.
Crossing Borders: From Private Dialogue to Public Debate -- Feeding on the Seed of the Woman:Dorothy Leigh and the Figure of Maternal Dissent -- At 'Liberty to Preach in the Chambers': Sarah Wight, Henry Jessey, and the New-Modeled Community of Saints -- The Knowing Few: Katherine Philips andThe Post-Courtly Coterie -- News from the New World: AnneBradstreet and Pan-Protestant Poetics -- Gathering and Scattering in Katharine Evans and Sarah Cheevers.
This book reveals that seventeenth-century women?s very marginality to traditional institutions of church and state made them catalysts forimagining an expanded public culture beyond these institutions. Women authors such as the conduct writer Dorothy Leigh, the prophet Sarah Wight, and the poet Katherine Philips recast sites of private dialogue?theextended family, the religious coventicle,and the poetic coterie?as the bases of public debate that crossed national borders. By revealing women writers? key role in the heated controversies of this period, Grayoffers a new reading of those struggles as fractured by private affiliation and extended by transnational alliance.
Electronic reproduction.
Basingstoke, England :
Palgrave Macmillan,
2009.
Mode of access:World Wide Web.
ISBN: 9780230605565
Standard No.: 10.1057/9780230605565doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
202103
English literature
--Women authorsIndex Terms--Genre/Form:
96803
Electronic books.
LC Class. No.: PR111 / .G73 2007eb
Dewey Class. No.: 820.9/9287
Women writers and public debate in 17th-century Britain
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[electronic resource] /
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Catharine Gray.
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1st ed.
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New York :
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x, 262 p.
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Early modern cultural studies
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Includes bibliographical references (P. [225]-247) and index.
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Crossing Borders: From Private Dialogue to Public Debate -- Feeding on the Seed of the Woman:Dorothy Leigh and the Figure of Maternal Dissent -- At 'Liberty to Preach in the Chambers': Sarah Wight, Henry Jessey, and the New-Modeled Community of Saints -- The Knowing Few: Katherine Philips andThe Post-Courtly Coterie -- News from the New World: AnneBradstreet and Pan-Protestant Poetics -- Gathering and Scattering in Katharine Evans and Sarah Cheevers.
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This book reveals that seventeenth-century women?s very marginality to traditional institutions of church and state made them catalysts forimagining an expanded public culture beyond these institutions. Women authors such as the conduct writer Dorothy Leigh, the prophet Sarah Wight, and the poet Katherine Philips recast sites of private dialogue?theextended family, the religious coventicle,and the poetic coterie?as the bases of public debate that crossed national borders. By revealing women writers? key role in the heated controversies of this period, Grayoffers a new reading of those struggles as fractured by private affiliation and extended by transnational alliance.
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Electronic reproduction.
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Basingstoke, England :
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Palgrave Macmillan,
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2009.
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Mode of access:World Wide Web.
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English literature
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Women authors
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202103
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access to fulltext (Palgrave)
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