This article discusses the Commonplace Book of Katherine Thomas, a little-known early modern woman writer preserved in the National Library of Wales. It considers what the Book reveals about Thomas's life and concerns, and pays particular attention to the moving elegies that she composed on the deaths of her husband and two of her children
This title was first published in 2002: Pamela Hammons’ study contributes to the booming field of ea...
Through focusing on the lives of women, this article examines silences and obfuscations in Samuel P...
This article takes as its starting point a remarkable account of childbirth in the memoirs of a seve...
Ms Thott 517 4° is a small illuminated fourteenth century English manuscript thatprincipally contain...
In this article using diaries and other kind of memoirs written by Samuel Pepys, John Evelyn, Adam M...
This collection demonstrates that child death was not just a family matter, but integral to how comm...
This article assesses the place of scholarship on early modern women’s writing, interrogating the co...
Review article for the following: Prayer Book and People in Elizabethan and Early Stuart England. B...
This article seeks to explore the absence of the body in the depiction of dying women in a selection...
This dissertation examines four different versions of the Legend of St. Katherine of Alexandria in M...
My thanks are owed to the Wellcome Trust for generously funding my doctoral degree, upon which this ...
This thesis examines the spiritual lives of eighteenth-century English women through an analysis of ...
This essay engages in current debates concerning the writing of early modern women’s ‘archipelagic’ ...
Pregnancy and childbirth is a biologically and socially constructed event which shaped the lives of ...
The thesis analyzes the extent to which English and Scottish women participated in the thriving manu...
This title was first published in 2002: Pamela Hammons’ study contributes to the booming field of ea...
Through focusing on the lives of women, this article examines silences and obfuscations in Samuel P...
This article takes as its starting point a remarkable account of childbirth in the memoirs of a seve...
Ms Thott 517 4° is a small illuminated fourteenth century English manuscript thatprincipally contain...
In this article using diaries and other kind of memoirs written by Samuel Pepys, John Evelyn, Adam M...
This collection demonstrates that child death was not just a family matter, but integral to how comm...
This article assesses the place of scholarship on early modern women’s writing, interrogating the co...
Review article for the following: Prayer Book and People in Elizabethan and Early Stuart England. B...
This article seeks to explore the absence of the body in the depiction of dying women in a selection...
This dissertation examines four different versions of the Legend of St. Katherine of Alexandria in M...
My thanks are owed to the Wellcome Trust for generously funding my doctoral degree, upon which this ...
This thesis examines the spiritual lives of eighteenth-century English women through an analysis of ...
This essay engages in current debates concerning the writing of early modern women’s ‘archipelagic’ ...
Pregnancy and childbirth is a biologically and socially constructed event which shaped the lives of ...
The thesis analyzes the extent to which English and Scottish women participated in the thriving manu...
This title was first published in 2002: Pamela Hammons’ study contributes to the booming field of ea...
Through focusing on the lives of women, this article examines silences and obfuscations in Samuel P...
This article takes as its starting point a remarkable account of childbirth in the memoirs of a seve...