04361nam 2200853 450 991079857660332120200122165455.01-5261-1089-X1-5261-1092-X10.7765/9781526110923(CKB)3710000000743407(EBL)4705498(SSID)ssj0001691194(PQKBManifestationID)16540087(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001691194(PQKBWorkID)13077087(PQKB)25079703(Au-PeEL)EBL4705498(CaPaEBR)ebr11274187(OCoLC)960166056(MiAaPQ)EBC4705498(UkMaJRU)992979626609001631(DE-B1597)658750(DE-B1597)9781526110923(EXLCZ)99371000000074340720191128h20162014 fy| 0engur||#---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierEarly modern women and the poem /edited by Susan WisemanManchester, UK :Manchester University Press,2016.©20141 online resource (272 pages) digital file(s)Includes index.1-5261-1684-7 0-7190-9072-5 Includes bibliographical references and index.Early modern women and the poem; Half Title Page; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; Contributors; Preface and acknowledgements; Introduction: Researching early modern women and the poem: Susan Wiseman; Part I: Inheritance; CHAPTER 1: Women's poetry and classical authors: Lucy Hutchinson and the classicisation of scripture: Edward Paleit; CHAPTER 2: Elizabeth Melville and the religious sonnet sequence in Scotland and England: Sarah C. E. Ross; CHAPTER 3: The Sapphic context of Lady Mary Wroth's: Line CottegniesCHAPTER 4: Women poets and men's sentences: genre and literary tradition in Katherine Philips's early poetry: Gillian WrightPart II: Circulation; CHAPTER 5: 'We thy Sydnean Psalmes shall celebrate': collaborative authorship, Sidney's sister and the English devotional lyric: Suzanne Trill; CHAPTER 6: Mary Wroth and hermaphroditic circulation: Paul Salzman; CHAPTER 7: Sisterhood and female friendship in Constance Aston Fowler's verse miscellany: Helen Hackett; CHAPTER 8: Late seventeenth-century women poets and the anxiety of attribution: Margaret J. M. Ezell; Part III: NarrativeCHAPTER 9: Rethinking authorial reluctance in the paratexts to Anne Bradstreet's poetry: Patricia PenderCHAPTER 10: A 'goodly sample': exemplarity, female complaint and early modern women's poetry: Rosalind Smith; CHAPTER 11: 'The nine-liv'd Sex': women and justice in seventeenth-century popular poetry: Judith Hudson; CHAPTER 12: The contemplative woman's recreation? Katherine Austen and the estate poem: Susan Wiseman; AFTERWORD: Reading early modern women and the poem: Patricia Pender and Rosalind Smith; IndexExamine factors influencing the relationships between writers and readers of poetry in seventeenth-century England and ScotlandAuthors and patronsGreat BritainHistoryEnglish poetryWomen authorsHistory and criticismLiteraturemupLiterary Studies: Poetry & PoetsbicsscLITERARY CRITICISM / PoetrybisachLiterary studies: poetry & poetsthemaEngland.Scotland.classical authors.classical inheritance.competitions.early modern women.female friendships.literary production.poem.religious sonnet sequence.secular sonnet sequence.Authors and patronsHistory.English poetryWomen authorsHistory and criticism.LiteratureLiterary Studies: Poetry & PoetsLITERARY CRITICISM / PoetryLiterary studies: poetry & poets821.0099287HI 1249rvkWiseman SusanUkMaJRUBOOK9910798576603321Early modern women and the poem3851910UNINA