Producing Women's Poetry, 1600–1730
Producing Women's Poetry is the first specialist study to consider English-language poetry by women across the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. Gillian Wright explores not only the forms and topics favored by women, but also how their verse was enabled and shaped by their textual and biographical circumstances. She combines traditional literary and bibliographical approaches to address women's complex use of manuscript and print and their relationships with the male-generated genres of the traditional literary canon, as well as the role of agents such as scribes, publishers and editors in helping to determine how women's poetry was preserved, circulated and remembered. Wright focuses on key figures in the emerging canon of early modern women's writing, Anne Bradstreet, Katherine Philips and Anne Finch, alongside the work of lesser-known poets Anne Southwell and Mary Monck, to create a new and compelling account of early modern women's literary history.
- The first study to focus exclusively on women's poetry in the period, giving women's writing the serious literary attention it deserves, while also benefiting from the insights of book history
- Case studies address the specific features of textual production in both manuscript and print, illustrating both the continuing importance of manuscript and the emergence of women poets as printed authors
- Traces the historical development of women's poetry across the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, setting the poets in their historical context and showing how other agents, including family, influenced if and when their work was published
Reviews & endorsements
"[A] subtle and important book … Wright probes difficult issues of authorship and intention, male and female control of texts, bringing to these questions sensitivity to literary form and scrupulous attention to material conditions."
Notes and Queries
"Wright's detailed book will prove useful not only to those interested in the individual authors examined here, but to readers more broadly concerned with the authorship, editing, and publication of women's poetry."
Claire Canavan, SHARP News
"… an absorbing, systematic exploration of the journey of early modern women’s poetry "from manuscript to print and back again", clarifying both the conditions and processes rendering it now historically visible."
Carole Sargent, Eighteenth-Century Studies
"Written with grace and care and supported by extensive archival research, Wright's work will b a valuable resource for scholars of print culture, scribal publication and women's writing for years to come."
Brian Pietras, Renaissance Quarterly
'In this superb study, Gillian Wright examines within the material environments of manuscript and print the work of five seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century women writers … The literary history Wright sets forth in this study is brilliantly executed at every textual and contextual level.' Arthur F. Marotti, Early Modern Women Journal
Product details
October 2015Paperback
9781107566774
286 pages
230 × 152 × 15 mm
0.4kg
5 b/w illus.
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. The resources of manuscript: Anne Southwell, readership and literary property
- 2. The material muse: Anne Bradstreet in manuscript and print
- 3. The extraordinary Katherine Philips
- 4. The anxieties of agency: compilation, publicity and judgement in Anne Finch's poetry
- 5. Publishing Marinda: Robert Molesworth, Mary Monck and Caroline of Ansbach
- Conclusion: producing women's poetry.