[James Daybell] Women Letter-Writers in Tudor England(pdf){Zzzzz}[BЯ]

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This book represents the most comprehensive study of women's letters and letter-writing during the early modern period so far undertaken, and acts as an important corrective to traditional ways of reading and discussing letters as private, elite, male, and non-political. Based on over 3,000 manuscript letters, it shows that letter-writing was a larger and more socially diversified area of female activity than has been hitherto assumed. In that letters constitute the largest body of extant sixteenth-century women's writing, the book initiates a reassessment of women's education and literacy in the period. As indicators of literacy, letters yield physical evidence of rudimentary writing activity and abilities, document "higher" forms of female literacy, and highlight women's mastery of formal rhetorical and epistolary conventions. The book also stresses that letters are unparalleled as intimate and immediate records of family relationships, and as media for personal and self-reflective forms of female expression. Read as documents that inscribe social and gender relations, letters shed light on the complex range of women's personal relationships, as female power and authority fluctuated, negotiated on an individual basis. Furthermore, correspondence highlights the important political roles played by early modern women. Female letter-writers were integral in cultivating and maintaining patronage and kinship networks; they were active as suitors for crown favor, and operated as political intermediaries and patrons in their own right, using letters to elicit influence. Letters thus help to locate differing forms of female power within the family, locality and occasionally on the wider political stage, and offer invaluable primary evidence from which to reconstruct the lives of early modern women.

Editorial Reviews
Review


"This demanding archival work has resulted in a complex and detailed analysis of virtually every feature of women's letter writing in the period 1540-1603. Because of its depth
and scope, this book will prove to be fundamental work in the scholarship of women's letter writing." --Modern Philology


About the Author
James Daybell is Senior Lecturer in History at the University of Plymouth. He is the editor of Early Modern Women's Letter-Writing, 1450-1700 (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2001; winner of the Society for the Study of Early Modern Women award for best collaborative project, 2002), and Women and Politics in Early Modern England, 1450-1700 (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2004), and has published numerous articles on early modern social and cultural history.

Publisher: Oxford University Press; 1 edition (August 24, 2006)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0199259917
ISBN-13: 978-0199259915


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[James Daybell] Women Letter-Writers in Tudor England(pdf){Zzzzz}[BЯ]