1st Edition

Rhetoric, Women and Politics in Early Modern England

Edited By Jennifer Richards, Alison Thorne Copyright 2007
264 Pages
by Routledge

264 Pages
by Routledge

264 Pages
by Routledge

Rhetoric has long been a powerful and pervasive force in political and cultural life, yet in the early modern period, rhetorical training was generally reserved as a masculine privilege. This volume argues, however, that women found a variety of ways to represent their interests persuasively, and that by looking more closely at the importance of rhetoric for early modern women, and their... Read more

Acknowledgements.  List of Contributors.  1. Introduction  2. Spelling Backwards  3. Caught in Medias Res: Female Intercession, ‘Regulation’ and ‘Exchange’  4. Speaking Women: Rhetoric and the Construction of Female Talk  5. Letter Writing Lucrece: Shakespeare in the 1590s  6. ‘Prebyterian Sibyl’: Truth-telling and Gender in The Third Advice to a Painter  7. Exemplarity, Women and Political Rhetoric  8. The Rhetoric of (In)fertility: Shifting Responses to Elizabeth I’s Childlessness  9. Women’s Letters of Recommendation and the Rhetoric of Friendship in Sixteenth-Century England  10. Embodied Rhetoric: Quaker Public Discourse in the 1650s.  Afterword.  Bibliography

Biography

Jennifer Richards, Alison Thorne