Until comparatively recently, Lucy Hutchinson’s Memoirs were read as a personal and private document, and, even though their significance as a primary historical source is now increasingly recognized, it is still generally assumed that they were conceived solely for circulation within her own family. Their true business, however, is with public affairs and posterity. Like the many other late seventeenth-century memoirs, they anticipate a posthumous readership, to whom they present an apologetic, justificatory, and highly partisan, account of the recent past, participating in a literary contest for the master narrative of seventeenth-century history. This argument is pursued through a comparative analysis of the Memoirs and other examples of...
This article explores The Memoirs of Mrs Anne Bailey, a short memoir published by a lone mother in L...
The pamphlet Seven Months in the Kingston Lunatic Asylum, and What I Saw There detailed the experien...
Women’s court memoirs of the Regency period could inspire hostile reactions in their early readershi...
Until comparatively recently, Lucy Hutchinson’s Memoirs were read as a personal and private document...
In the 1640s, Lucy Hutchinson (1620-1681) wrote a manuscript account of her husband’s “services” to ...
In the account of her husband, John’s, final days, Lucy Hutchinson depicts him as a Mosaic figure, d...
This thesis offers the first study of ecclesiology in the manuscript writings of Lucy Hutchinson (16...
In The Memoirs of Colonel Hutchinson, Lucy Hutchinson not only built a vibrant vindication of her la...
Lucy Hutchinson (1620–1681) and Margaret Cavendish (1623–1673), prolific writers from th...
Cet article se propose de mettre en évidence le travail d’historienne auquel se livre Lucy Hutchinso...
International audienceThe critical construction of Hutchinson as a humanist poet and translator has ...
This thesis looks beyond the stereotypes of women as transmitters and caretakers of businesses by fo...
The posthumously published *Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Robinson* (1801) has been read as a final—but f...
My central premise in “Revised Lives” is that four English writers - Margaret Cavendish, Anne Halket...
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. Sometime before the death of Queen Car...
This article explores The Memoirs of Mrs Anne Bailey, a short memoir published by a lone mother in L...
The pamphlet Seven Months in the Kingston Lunatic Asylum, and What I Saw There detailed the experien...
Women’s court memoirs of the Regency period could inspire hostile reactions in their early readershi...
Until comparatively recently, Lucy Hutchinson’s Memoirs were read as a personal and private document...
In the 1640s, Lucy Hutchinson (1620-1681) wrote a manuscript account of her husband’s “services” to ...
In the account of her husband, John’s, final days, Lucy Hutchinson depicts him as a Mosaic figure, d...
This thesis offers the first study of ecclesiology in the manuscript writings of Lucy Hutchinson (16...
In The Memoirs of Colonel Hutchinson, Lucy Hutchinson not only built a vibrant vindication of her la...
Lucy Hutchinson (1620–1681) and Margaret Cavendish (1623–1673), prolific writers from th...
Cet article se propose de mettre en évidence le travail d’historienne auquel se livre Lucy Hutchinso...
International audienceThe critical construction of Hutchinson as a humanist poet and translator has ...
This thesis looks beyond the stereotypes of women as transmitters and caretakers of businesses by fo...
The posthumously published *Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Robinson* (1801) has been read as a final—but f...
My central premise in “Revised Lives” is that four English writers - Margaret Cavendish, Anne Halket...
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. Sometime before the death of Queen Car...
This article explores The Memoirs of Mrs Anne Bailey, a short memoir published by a lone mother in L...
The pamphlet Seven Months in the Kingston Lunatic Asylum, and What I Saw There detailed the experien...
Women’s court memoirs of the Regency period could inspire hostile reactions in their early readershi...