1st Edition
Letters and the Body, 1700–1830 Writing and Embodiment
Introduction
Sarah Goldsmith, Sheryllynne Haggerty and Karen Harvey
Part 1: Imagined bodies and imagining touch
1. Absent Bodies? Gouty brethren and sensitive hearts in William Constable’s letters from the Grand Tour 1769–1771
Rachel Feldberg
2. Imagining youth: Epistolary representations of the eighteenth-century adolescent and youthful body
Sarah Goldsmith
3. Touch me if you can: Paper bodies in letters to and from the eighteenth-century French Caribbean
Annika Raapke
Part 2: Material bodies/material letters
4. Sympathy in practice: Eighteenth-century letters and the material body
Karen Harvey
5. 'Urge, urge, urge, dogs gnawing': Pain, play and the material text in Jonathan Swift’s Journal to Stella
Abigail Williams
6. Blackness, whiteness and bodily degeneration in British women’s letters from India
Onni Gust
7. 'A thousand kisses': Postscript, appendices and desire in The Memoirs of Mrs. Sophia Baddeley, Late of Drury Lane Theatre (1787)
Frith Taylor
Part 3: Bodies deployed
8. I "never had the happeness of Receivin one Letter from You": Unlettered letters from Jamaica, 1756
Sheryllynne Haggerty
9. Constructing the body in English pauper letters, 1780–1834
Steven King
10. Labouring bodies: Work animals and hack writers in Oliver Goldsmith’s letters
Taylin Nelson
11. Sons of liberty: Epistolary bodies and the early American Revolution
Nathan Perl-Rosenthal
Biography
Sarah Goldsmith is a Chancellor’s Fellow at the University of Edinburgh. She researches the histories of masculinity, bodies and travel. Her first monograph was Masculinity and Danger on the Eighteenth-Century Grand Tour (2020). She is an AHRC/BBC New Generation Thinker and consulted on the V&A’s 2022 Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear exhibition.
Sheryllynne Haggerty is Honorary Research Fellow at WISE, University of Hull. She has published extensively on the economy and networks of the eighteenth-century British Atlantic, including ‘Merely for Money’? Business Culture in the British Atlantic 1750–1815 (2012) and Ordinary People, Extraordinary Times: Living the British Empire in Jamaica, 1756 (2023).
Karen Harvey is Professor of Cultural History at the University of Birmingham. She has published extensively on the history of gender, masculinity, sexuality, the home and material culture, including The Little Republic: Masculinity and Domestic Authority in Eighteenth-Century Britain (2012) and The Imposteress Rabbit Breeder: Mary Toft and Eighteenth-Century England (2020).






