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Liberty and the Politics of the Female Voice in Early Stuart England - Christina Luckyj

Liberty and the Politics of the Female Voice in Early Stuart England

Buch | Softcover
291 Seiten
2024
Cambridge University Press (Verlag)
978-1-108-94952-1 (ISBN)
CHF 39,95 inkl. MwSt
This study argues that the female voice occupied a key role in the early Stuart political imaginary as a means of signalling resistance to tyranny. Like their male contemporaries, including Shakespeare, early modern women writers deployed female voices to craft powerful new discourses of religious and political liberty.
The female voice was deployed by male and female authors alike to signal emerging discourses of religious and political liberty in early Stuart England. Christina Luckyj's important new study focuses critical attention on writing in multiple genres to show how, in the coded rhetoric of seventeenth-century religious politics, the wife's conscience in resisting tyranny represents the rights of the subject, and the bride's militant voice in the Song of Songs champions Christ's independent jurisdiction. Revealing this gendered system of representation through close analysis of writings by Elizabeth Cary, Aemilia Lanyer, Rachel Speght, Mary Wroth and Anne Southwell, Luckyj illuminates the dangers of essentializing female voices and restricting them to domestic space. Through their connections with parliament, with factional courtiers, or with dissident religious figures, major women writers occupied a powerful oppositional stance in relation to early Stuart monarchs and crafted a radical new politics of the female voice.

Christina Luckyj is McCulloch Chair and Professor of English at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. She is the author of 'A Winter's Snake:' Dramatic Form in the Tragedies of John Webster (1989) and 'A Moving Rhetoricke:' Gender and Silence in Early Modern England (2002) as well as editor of The White Devil (2008) and The Duchess of Malfi: A Critical Guide (2011). She co-edited (with Niamh J. O'Leary) The Politics of Female Alliance in Early Modern England (2017), which won the Society for the Study of Early Modern Women Award for Best Collaborative Project published in 2017. Her new Introduction to the New Cambridge Shakespeare Othello (third edition) appeared in 2018 and she is currently editing The Winter's Tale for the Cambridge Shakespeare Editions.

1. The politics of the female voice; 2. Conscience and desire; 3. Elizabeth Cary and the 'publike-good'; 4. 'Not Sparing Kings:' Aemilia Lanyer; 5. Rachel Speght and the 'Criticall Reader'; 6. Mary Wroth and the politics of liberty; 7. 'Yokefellow, or Slave:' Anne Southwell.

Erscheinungsdatum
Zusatzinfo Worked examples or Exercises
Verlagsort Cambridge
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Anglistik / Amerikanistik
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Literaturwissenschaft
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Gender Studies
ISBN-10 1-108-94952-5 / 1108949525
ISBN-13 978-1-108-94952-1 / 9781108949521
Zustand Neuware
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