During the eighteenth century, British critics applied terms of gender to literature according to the belief that masculine values represented the best literature and feminine terms signified less important works or authors. Laura Runge contends however that the meaning of gendered terms like \u27manly\u27 or \u27effeminate\u27 changes over time, and that the language of eighteenth-century criticism cannot be fully understood without careful analysis of the gendered language of the era. She examines conventions in various fields of critical language - Dryden\u27s prose, the early novel, criticism by women, and the developing aesthetic - to show how gendered epistemology shaped critical \u27truths\u27. Her exploration of critical commonplace...
Fictional depictions of feminine reading and writing practices reveal transformations in expectation...
Throughout the eighteenth century, the genre of women’s poetry heavily annotated with editorializing...
Mapping the relationship between gender and space in eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Britis...
During the eighteenth century, British critics applied terms of gender to literature according to th...
This piece explores the performance of gender in literary criticism of the period 1660-1740 and in P...
This thesis discusses the 'rise' of the female critic in the long eighteenth century through the spe...
The emergence and development of the modern novel used to be viewed as a largely masculine affair. H...
This dissertation investigates the textual gesture whereby a male author--the ladies\u27 man of my t...
A corpus of terms for human beings collected from 18th century novels is studied from a broad sociol...
This dissertation demonstrates that women authors in the eighteenth century carved out a space for t...
In an analysis of literary and historical documents from the sixteenth to the early eighteenth centu...
This study is an examination of how gendered characters in eighteenth-century British women\u27s fic...
English women writers of the eighteenth century manifested enthusiasm for a form best described as a...
This essay offers two methods that will help students resist the temptation to judge eighteenth-cent...
English women writers of the eighteenth century manifested enthusiasm for a form best described as a...
Fictional depictions of feminine reading and writing practices reveal transformations in expectation...
Throughout the eighteenth century, the genre of women’s poetry heavily annotated with editorializing...
Mapping the relationship between gender and space in eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Britis...
During the eighteenth century, British critics applied terms of gender to literature according to th...
This piece explores the performance of gender in literary criticism of the period 1660-1740 and in P...
This thesis discusses the 'rise' of the female critic in the long eighteenth century through the spe...
The emergence and development of the modern novel used to be viewed as a largely masculine affair. H...
This dissertation investigates the textual gesture whereby a male author--the ladies\u27 man of my t...
A corpus of terms for human beings collected from 18th century novels is studied from a broad sociol...
This dissertation demonstrates that women authors in the eighteenth century carved out a space for t...
In an analysis of literary and historical documents from the sixteenth to the early eighteenth centu...
This study is an examination of how gendered characters in eighteenth-century British women\u27s fic...
English women writers of the eighteenth century manifested enthusiasm for a form best described as a...
This essay offers two methods that will help students resist the temptation to judge eighteenth-cent...
English women writers of the eighteenth century manifested enthusiasm for a form best described as a...
Fictional depictions of feminine reading and writing practices reveal transformations in expectation...
Throughout the eighteenth century, the genre of women’s poetry heavily annotated with editorializing...
Mapping the relationship between gender and space in eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Britis...