Women, Poetry, and Politics in Seventeenth-Century Britain offers a
new account of women's engagement in the poetic and political cultures
of seventeenth-century England and Scotland, based on poetry that was
produced and circulated in manuscript. Katherine Philips is often
regarded as the first in a cluster of women writers, including
Margaret Cavendish and Aphra Behn, who were political, secular,
literary, print-published, and renowned. Sarah C. E. Ross explores a
new corpus of political poetry by women, offering detailed readings of
Elizabeth Melville, Anne Southwell, Jane Cavendish, Hester Pulter, and
Lucy Hutchinson, and making the compelling case that female political
poetics emerge out of social and religious poetic modes and out of
manuscript-based authorial practices. Situating each writer in her
political and intellectual contexts, from early covenanting Scotland
to Restoration England, this volume explores women's political
articulation in the devotional lyric, biblical verse paraphrase,
occasional verse, elegy, and emblem. For women, excluded from the
public-political sphere, these rhetorically-modest genres and the
figural language of poetry offered vital modes of political
expression; and women of diverse affiliations use religious and social
poetics, the tropes of family and household, and the genres of
occasionality that proliferated in manuscript culture to imagine the
state. Attending also to the transmission and reception of women's
poetry in networks of varying reach, Sarah C. E. Ross reveals
continuities and evolutions in women's relationship to politics and
poetry, and identifies a female tradition of politicised poetry in
manuscript spanning the decades before, during, and after the Civil
Wars.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191036163
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
OUP Oxford
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter