Family Authorship and Romantic Print CulturePalgrave Macmillan, 17.01.2008 - 220 Seiten Family Authorship and Romantic Print Culture explores the conjunction of authorship and family life as a distinctive cultural formation of Romantic-era Britain. Through examination of the practices and texts of literary families, the book traces an alternative history of Romantic authorship, one that lies on the cusp between a vanishing manuscript culture and the dominance of print; that reflects a struggle in Romantic self-identity between communities of feeling and individual genius; and that grapples with an evolving tension between the private and public spheres. |
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Seite 29
... female duties other than the obvious biolo- gical ones.17 For a working female author , this was a position with prac- tical consequences . Barbauld effectively stands outside what Kathryn Shevelow , in her study of the role women ...
... female duties other than the obvious biolo- gical ones.17 For a working female author , this was a position with prac- tical consequences . Barbauld effectively stands outside what Kathryn Shevelow , in her study of the role women ...
Seite 43
... female heads of households and female heads of state alike — and suggests the porousness of the divi- sion between male and female education and the public and private spheres . V. Conclusion In the early years of the nineteenth century ...
... female heads of households and female heads of state alike — and suggests the porousness of the divi- sion between male and female education and the public and private spheres . V. Conclusion In the early years of the nineteenth century ...
Seite 94
... female authorship , and its use as the reason for the Taylors ' early anonymity , bears closer scrutiny . As Paula Feldman has recently shown , anonymity was far less common for female writers , particularly of poetry ( as opposed to ...
... female authorship , and its use as the reason for the Taylors ' early anonymity , bears closer scrutiny . As Paula Feldman has recently shown , anonymity was far less common for female writers , particularly of poetry ( as opposed to ...
Inhalt
Coleridge Manuscript Culture and the Family Romance | 53 |
Working Families and the Childrens Book Trade | 97 |
The Shelleys the Wordsworths and the Family Tour | 133 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Aikin and Barbauld Ann Taylor Anna Barbauld argued Barbauld and Aikin biography brother chapter Charles Charles Lamb child Coleridge's collaborative contributions daughter Department of Special discourse domestic Dorothy Dorothy Wordsworth Dove Cottage early economic Edgeworth edition editors eighteenth century engraving example family authors family authorship father female friends gender genius gift economy Godwin History human husband ideal Isaac Jane John Aikin Juvenile Library labor Lamb Lessons letters literature Lloyd manuscript culture Mary Shelley Mary's middle-class Mont Blanc mother narrative nation offer Percy Percy Bysshe Shelley Percy's poet poetic poetry political PPALB preface print culture prose published PWPS readers relationship Review Romantic period Sara Coleridge Sarah Trimmer scholars separate spheres Shelley's sister social sonnets Southey Special Collections story suggests tion Tour UCLA verse volume wife William women Wordsworth Wordsworth Trust writing written wrote Young Research Library