Gender and Authorship in the Sidney CircleUniversity of Wisconsin Press, 1990 - 297 ページ This study demonstrates the extent to which reading and writing were gendered acts in 16th- and early 17th-century England. Renaissance gender ideology did not prevent women from writing altogether, but it affected all writing by creating different standards of acceptability for female writers than for their male counterparts. Lamb explores the effect of this gendered ideology of authors in a famous Renaissance family - the Sidneys: Sir Philip Sidney, his sister, the Countess of Pembroke, and his niece, Mary Wroth, two notable and productive women authors of the time. |
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... passionate natures , subject to envy and voyeurism . Practic- ing the sexualized reading imagined for women by gender ideology , Sidney's inscribed female audience functions as a rhetorical ploy , The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia 75.
... passionate natures , subject to envy and voyeurism . Practic- ing the sexualized reading imagined for women by gender ideology , Sidney's inscribed female audience functions as a rhetorical ploy , The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia 75.
76 ページ
Mary Ellen Lamb. Sidney's inscribed female audience functions as a rhetorical ploy , to guide readers of both gender to " read like women " in the first three books . In the last two books , all references to fair ladies drop out of the ...
Mary Ellen Lamb. Sidney's inscribed female audience functions as a rhetorical ploy , to guide readers of both gender to " read like women " in the first three books . In the last two books , all references to fair ladies drop out of the ...
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Abraham Fraunce Amphilanthus anger Antissia apparently Astrophel beloved Ben Jonson Breton's characters Cleopatra compassion constant heroine Countess of Montgomery's countess of Pembroke courtly created cultural death dedication desire discourse of gender discussed dying Elizabeth English fair ladies Fraunce Fraunce's gender difference grief heroics of constancy holograph poems husband inscribed Ivychurch Lady Mary Wroth literary London lover male manuscript Mary Sidney Mary Wroth masculine Moffett Montgomery's Urania moriendi Mornay's Musidorus narrative narrator Nicholas Breton nightingale Old Arcadia Pamela Pamphilia passion patronage Pembroke's Arcadia Pembrokiana Penbrooke Penelope Devereux perhaps Philoclea Philomela poet poetry Press princesses protagonists provides Pyrocles queen reading Renaissance Renaissance women representation represents reveals Robert role sexual Sidney's silence silkworms Sir Philip Sidney sister song sonnet Spenser Stoic Stoicism story suggests tion translation Univ Urania verse version of authorship woman women readers women writers women's authorship women's speech words writing Wroth's romance