This dissertation explores the intersection between personal letters and published admonitions during the decades following the American Revolution. Based on the analysis of letters and diaries composed between 1776 and 1830 by elite white women situated in the northeast, it reveals the extent to which correspondents appropriated, manipulated, or rejected the vocabulary and messages they discovered in novels, magazines, etiquette manuals, and social experts\u27 pronouncements. Uncertain about the cultural authority invested in the written word, correspondents self-consciously explored the meaning of writing as they composed their letters. As they wrote about writing, reading, the contrasts between rural and urban living, politics, and refin...
textIn this dissertation, I examine antagonistic relationships between women writers in the first ha...
This dissertation examines public letters in England during the period spanning the English Civil Wa...
What did it mean to be a white female in the eighteenth-century South? This dissertation proposes an...
This dissertation adds a new chapter to the history of the social revolution that accompanied the Am...
This study analyses the themes, rhetoric and imagery in the weekly newspaper The New-England Courant...
Examining significant moments of women's letter-writing from throughout the late medieval and early ...
Among the first generation of published authors in the early American republic, Mercy Otis Warren an...
Focussing on letters from readers of ladies\u27 thinspace periodicals as well as advertisements pl...
Although professors of ancient art of letter writing were among the most revered in medieval univers...
"Regulating Passion" explores how sexual behavior affected the construction of citizenship and the b...
textMy dissertation argues for a fundamental reorientation of our approach to public intimacy and id...
textMy dissertation argues for a fundamental reorientation of our approach to public intimacy and id...
This dissertation examines public letters in England during the period spanning the English Civil Wa...
This study examines the major works of Judith Sargent Murray, Hannah Webster Foster, and Susanna Has...
What did it mean to be a white female in the eighteenth-century South? This dissertation proposes an...
textIn this dissertation, I examine antagonistic relationships between women writers in the first ha...
This dissertation examines public letters in England during the period spanning the English Civil Wa...
What did it mean to be a white female in the eighteenth-century South? This dissertation proposes an...
This dissertation adds a new chapter to the history of the social revolution that accompanied the Am...
This study analyses the themes, rhetoric and imagery in the weekly newspaper The New-England Courant...
Examining significant moments of women's letter-writing from throughout the late medieval and early ...
Among the first generation of published authors in the early American republic, Mercy Otis Warren an...
Focussing on letters from readers of ladies\u27 thinspace periodicals as well as advertisements pl...
Although professors of ancient art of letter writing were among the most revered in medieval univers...
"Regulating Passion" explores how sexual behavior affected the construction of citizenship and the b...
textMy dissertation argues for a fundamental reorientation of our approach to public intimacy and id...
textMy dissertation argues for a fundamental reorientation of our approach to public intimacy and id...
This dissertation examines public letters in England during the period spanning the English Civil Wa...
This study examines the major works of Judith Sargent Murray, Hannah Webster Foster, and Susanna Has...
What did it mean to be a white female in the eighteenth-century South? This dissertation proposes an...
textIn this dissertation, I examine antagonistic relationships between women writers in the first ha...
This dissertation examines public letters in England during the period spanning the English Civil Wa...
What did it mean to be a white female in the eighteenth-century South? This dissertation proposes an...