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Eighteenth-Century Women Poets and Their Poetry Paula R. Backscheider (Pepperell Eminent Scholar, Auburn University)

Eighteenth-Century Women Poets and Their Poetry By Paula R. Backscheider (Pepperell Eminent Scholar, Auburn University)

Eighteenth-Century Women Poets and Their Poetry by Paula R. Backscheider (Pepperell Eminent Scholar, Auburn University)


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Summary

Offers a broad view of the writing and careers of eighteenth-century women poets, highlighting on the ways in which poetry was read and enjoyed, on changing poetic tastes in British culture, and on the development of many major poetic genres and traditions. It explores the forms in which women wrote and the uses to which they put those forms.

Eighteenth-Century Women Poets and Their Poetry Summary

Eighteenth-Century Women Poets and Their Poetry: Inventing Agency, Inventing Genre by Paula R. Backscheider (Pepperell Eminent Scholar, Auburn University)

This large-scale project aims to present a broad, original perspective on the writing and lives of eighteenth century (British) women poets. More specifically, it seeks to do so by giving close attention to the intersections of agency-as evident in the distinct ways in which women made use of poetry in their lives-and genre. Like some other recent scholars, Paula Backscheider here construes the latter term to include categories based on popular contemporary ideas of poems and their purposes, defined sometimes more by form and sometimes more by subject matter. She focuses in particular on the commonalities and differences, both of which she often finds revealing, between the functions of individual genres for men and for women. The roughly forty poets she considers are meant to constitute a diverse but not systematic or exhaustively comprehensive selection.

Eighteenth-Century Women Poets and Their Poetry Reviews

Backscheider... writes with an ease and clarity that make this book fully accessible. Choice 2006 Passionate and wide-ranging study. -- Helen Deutsch London Review of Books 2006 Wise and preeminently useful... A courageous book. -- Ellen Moody Eighteenth-Century Intelligencer Our sense of eighteenth-century poetic territory is immeasurably expanded by the new work of Backscheider... Besides an excellent historical and cultural introduction on the landscape of poetry production in the eighteenth century,... each chapter offers fine-grained close readings of often fully quoted poems (many of which are still not readily available in print) along with biographical and formal contexts. -- Cynthia Wall Studies in English Literature 2006 For specialists of eighteenth-century literature in English, this is a must-read book. -- Betty A. Schellenberg Eighteenth-Century Studies 2006 This book paves the way for further work and is itself a valuable contribution to exciting nascent debates. -- Louise Marshall Modern Language Review 2008 Brilliantly introduces issues, opportunities, and new directions, that open up vistas into a vital world of complex personalities, engaging social practices, and inspiring artistic achievements. -- Elizabeth Kraft Scriblerian 2008 One of the best and most significant books on eighteenth-century poetry to appear in recent years. -- Stephen C. Behrendt Wordsworth Circle 2007

About Paula R. Backscheider (Pepperell Eminent Scholar, Auburn University)

Paula R. Backscheider is the Philpott-Stevens Eminent Scholar in the Department of English at Auburn University. She is the author of several books, including Daniel Defoe: His Life, Spectacular Politics: Theatrical Power and Mass Culture in Early Modern England, and Reflections on Biography, and editor of Revising Women: Eighteenth-Century Women's Fiction and Social Engagement.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Plan of the Book
Approaching the Poetry
The Chapters
1. Introduction
Changing Contexts
Systems, Gender, and Persistent Issues
Agency and the ''Marked Marker''
2. Anne Finch and What Women Wrote
The Social and the Formal
Anne Finch and Popular Poetry
Poetry on Poetry
The Spleen as Legacy
3. Women and Poetry in the Public Eye
Poetry as News and Critique
The Woman Question
Elizabeth Singer Rowe
4. Hymns, Narratives, and Innovations in Religious Poetry
The Voice of Paraphrase
The Hymn as Personal Lyric
Religious Poetry as Subversive Narrative
Devout Soliloquies
5. Friendship Poems
The Legacy of Katherine Philips
Encouragement and the Counteruniverse
Jane Brereton
Adaptation and Ideology
6. Retirement Poetry
Beyond Convention
Memory, Time, and Elizabeth Carter
Reflection and Difference
7. The Elegy
What Did Women Write?
Representative Composers: Darwall and Seward
The Elegy and Same-Sex Desire
Entertainment and Forgetting
8. The Sonnet, Charlotte Smith, and What Women Wrote
The Sonnet and the Political
Sonnet Sequences
Women Poets and the Spread of the Sonnet
The Emigrants, Conversations, and Beachy Head
Smith as Transitional Poet
9. Conclusion
Biographies of the Poets
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Additional information

NPB9780801881695
9780801881695
0801881692
Eighteenth-Century Women Poets and Their Poetry: Inventing Agency, Inventing Genre by Paula R. Backscheider (Pepperell Eminent Scholar, Auburn University)
New
Hardback
Johns Hopkins University Press
2006-02-25
544
Joint winner of Modern Language Association James Russell Lowell Prize 2006 (United States)
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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