As the Enlightenment drew to a close, translation had gradually acquired an increasingly important role in the international circulation and transmission of scientific knowledge. Yet comparatively little attention has been paid to the translators responsible for making such accounts accessible in other languages, some of whom were women. In this article I explore how European women cast themselves as intellectually enquiring, knowledgeable and authoritative figures in their translations. Focusing specifically on the genre of scientific travel writing, I investigate the narrative strategies deployed by women translators to mark their involvement in the process of scientific knowledge-making. These strategies ranged from rhetorical near-invis...
‘It is a pity that not someone like Christina Leonora de Neufville found the time to take on that wo...
Before 1780, only ten books of travel by women had been published in Britain and Ireland, all by sin...
Albrecht von Haller's Die Alpen [The Alps] was an immensely popular piece of early eighteenth-centur...
As the Enlightenment drew to a close, translation had gradually acquired an increasingly important r...
The subject of this article is women’s popularisation of scientific texts in the eighteenth century....
El tema de este artículo es la popularización de los textos científicos escritos por mujeres en el s...
In a counter-argument to the invisibility of translators and of women in the history of science, thi...
The anonymous Taxidermy: or the Art of Collecting, Preparing and Mounting Objects of Natural History...
1Peritexts and women in translation are the two main topics of this paper. The underlying research q...
Between 1770 and 1779 Carl Peter Thunberg (1743–1828), one of the so-called apostles of the renowned...
This article introduces a Special Issue of Women's Writing on the theme of women's travel writing. I...
This thesis analyses the translation careers and practices of three British Victorian women translat...
This article explores the diverse materialities of texts created by three female luminaries that exp...
In 1780 the English translator and essayist Eliza Ball Hayley (b.1750-1797) published Essays on Frie...
When do books start living? When the author first conceives them, when they are written, when they a...
‘It is a pity that not someone like Christina Leonora de Neufville found the time to take on that wo...
Before 1780, only ten books of travel by women had been published in Britain and Ireland, all by sin...
Albrecht von Haller's Die Alpen [The Alps] was an immensely popular piece of early eighteenth-centur...
As the Enlightenment drew to a close, translation had gradually acquired an increasingly important r...
The subject of this article is women’s popularisation of scientific texts in the eighteenth century....
El tema de este artículo es la popularización de los textos científicos escritos por mujeres en el s...
In a counter-argument to the invisibility of translators and of women in the history of science, thi...
The anonymous Taxidermy: or the Art of Collecting, Preparing and Mounting Objects of Natural History...
1Peritexts and women in translation are the two main topics of this paper. The underlying research q...
Between 1770 and 1779 Carl Peter Thunberg (1743–1828), one of the so-called apostles of the renowned...
This article introduces a Special Issue of Women's Writing on the theme of women's travel writing. I...
This thesis analyses the translation careers and practices of three British Victorian women translat...
This article explores the diverse materialities of texts created by three female luminaries that exp...
In 1780 the English translator and essayist Eliza Ball Hayley (b.1750-1797) published Essays on Frie...
When do books start living? When the author first conceives them, when they are written, when they a...
‘It is a pity that not someone like Christina Leonora de Neufville found the time to take on that wo...
Before 1780, only ten books of travel by women had been published in Britain and Ireland, all by sin...
Albrecht von Haller's Die Alpen [The Alps] was an immensely popular piece of early eighteenth-centur...