Vita.Published in 1686, John Shirley's The Illustrious History of Women is one of the numerous works about women by men, so popular in the seventeenth century. More properly a catalogue than actual history, this text is a compilation of stories collected from various sources extolling such virtues as chastity, piety, humility, steadfastness, and courage, and praising the women who embody these qualities in their lives (and deaths). Dozens of misogynist works surfaced in England during the seventeenth century, and, by mid-century, this publication activity festered into some rather strident exchanges. As the century neared its closing decades, the debate took on a familiar shape: the querelle des femmes. While specific issues and distinct...
Literature always reflects the spirit of the age, which produces it. Authors have turned to other ti...
Nearly all the ideas, concepts, perspectives, and definitions that have been constructed, appropriat...
This thesis contextualises the treatment of women in Alexander Pope's Epistle to a Lady (1743) again...
[28], 158 p.Preface signed: John Shirley.Reproduction of original in the Huntington Library
Although there has been a great deal of research done on the English Renaissance Controversy about w...
The querelle des femmes was a debate over the condition of women in society lasting four centuries a...
This work is concerned with the change in ideas about women and their place in society and its relat...
Anastatia Sims, Ph.D., Dept. of History “Wanton Wenches and Nasty Women: Vindicating Women’s Rights ...
This edited collection opens new ways to look at queenship in areas and countries not usually studie...
This dissertation considers as cultural artifacts surviving manuscripts of legendaries (collections ...
In 1540, King Henry VIII married his fifth wife, Katherine Howard. Less than two years later, the yo...
This study traces the history of women's historical writing, reclaiming the lives of individual wome...
Scholars generally identify 1792, the year of the publication of Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Vindicati...
' ... it is impossible / That any clerk wol speke good of wyves.' Behind the words of Chaucer's Wife...
Misogyny is of course not the whole story of medieval discourse on women: medieval culture also envi...
Literature always reflects the spirit of the age, which produces it. Authors have turned to other ti...
Nearly all the ideas, concepts, perspectives, and definitions that have been constructed, appropriat...
This thesis contextualises the treatment of women in Alexander Pope's Epistle to a Lady (1743) again...
[28], 158 p.Preface signed: John Shirley.Reproduction of original in the Huntington Library
Although there has been a great deal of research done on the English Renaissance Controversy about w...
The querelle des femmes was a debate over the condition of women in society lasting four centuries a...
This work is concerned with the change in ideas about women and their place in society and its relat...
Anastatia Sims, Ph.D., Dept. of History “Wanton Wenches and Nasty Women: Vindicating Women’s Rights ...
This edited collection opens new ways to look at queenship in areas and countries not usually studie...
This dissertation considers as cultural artifacts surviving manuscripts of legendaries (collections ...
In 1540, King Henry VIII married his fifth wife, Katherine Howard. Less than two years later, the yo...
This study traces the history of women's historical writing, reclaiming the lives of individual wome...
Scholars generally identify 1792, the year of the publication of Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Vindicati...
' ... it is impossible / That any clerk wol speke good of wyves.' Behind the words of Chaucer's Wife...
Misogyny is of course not the whole story of medieval discourse on women: medieval culture also envi...
Literature always reflects the spirit of the age, which produces it. Authors have turned to other ti...
Nearly all the ideas, concepts, perspectives, and definitions that have been constructed, appropriat...
This thesis contextualises the treatment of women in Alexander Pope's Epistle to a Lady (1743) again...