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Reading Women: Literacy, Authorship, and Culture in the Atlantic World, 15-18
Contributor(s): Hackel, Heidi Brayman (Editor), Kelly, Catherine E. (Editor)
ISBN: 0812220803     ISBN-13: 9780812220803
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
OUR PRICE:   $28.45  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: October 2009
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism | Women Authors
- Literary Criticism | Books & Reading
Dewey: 820.992
Series: Material Texts
Physical Information: 0.8" H x 6" W x 9" (0.95 lbs) 280 pages
Themes:
- Sex & Gender - Feminine
- Cultural Region - British Isles
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

In 1500, as many as 99 out of 100 English women may have been illiterate, and girls of all social backgrounds were the objects of purposeful efforts to restrict their access to full literacy. Three centuries later, more than half of all English and Anglo-American women could read, and the female reader was emerging as a cultural ideal and a market force. While scholars have written extensively about women's reading in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and about women's writing in the early modern period, they have not attended sufficiently to the critical transformation that took place as female readers and their reading assumed significant cultural and economic power.

Reading Women brings into conversation the latest scholarship by early modernists and early Americanists on the role of gender in the production and consumption of texts during this expansion of female readership. Drawing together historians and literary scholars, the essays share a concern with local specificity and material culture. Removing women from the historically inaccurate frame of exclusively solitary, silent reading, the authors collectively return their subjects to the activities that so often coincided with reading: shopping, sewing, talking, writing, performing, and collecting. With chapters on samplers, storytelling, testimony, and translation, the volume expands notions of reading and literacy, and it insists upon a rich and varied narrative that crosses disciplinary boundaries and national borders.