This article explores aspects of the textual relationship between women and early modern London by examining three verbal 'snapshots' of the city in works either written by women or focusing on women in their urban environment. The first text, Isabella Whitney's 'Wyll and Testament' (1573), addresses London from a rural perspective, treating the city as a fickle male to whom she wants to hand back all his treasures. The poem constructs a vivid and ironic social topography, giving a glimpse of the roles of men and women in the Tudor city. The second text is by Mary Carleton, the roguish Restoration figure who defended her apparently 'counterfeit' life in the prose of The Case of Madam Mary Carleton (1663). Carleton's London is a place of unw...
This dissertation examines how and why novelists depict their heroines being plunged into the sensor...
The paper intends to provide a reflection on the role of literary imagination in shaping the identit...
In Tudor and Stuart Britain, women writers were shaped by their culture, but they also helped to sha...
This article explores aspects of the textual relationship between women and early modern London by e...
This article explores aspects of the textual relationship between women and early modern London by e...
My dissertation, Hucksters, Hags, and Bawds: Gendering Place in Early Modern London, examines depi...
Printed books were an urban phenomenon. Isabella Whitney famously sends her readers to St. Paul’s Ch...
This dissertation investigates the representation, in fiction, of London's spaces of pleasure, in th...
The dominant model of female authorship from 1690 to 1740 is London-centred, professional and fictio...
This thesis argues that the flâneuse is present in literature well before the late nineteenth centur...
This article explores the ways in which mid-Tudor writing addressed and imagined the city of London....
A chapter from Genre and Women’s Life Writing in Early Modern England. By taking account of the ways...
This dissertation focuses on the particular ways in which early modern English playwrights connect g...
Restricted until 21 July 2010.Frequently in early modern London, as Elizabeth Fowler aptly put it, ...
A Bag of Tricks: Literary Tricksters as Mediators of Changing Gender Roles in Early Modern London. D...
This dissertation examines how and why novelists depict their heroines being plunged into the sensor...
The paper intends to provide a reflection on the role of literary imagination in shaping the identit...
In Tudor and Stuart Britain, women writers were shaped by their culture, but they also helped to sha...
This article explores aspects of the textual relationship between women and early modern London by e...
This article explores aspects of the textual relationship between women and early modern London by e...
My dissertation, Hucksters, Hags, and Bawds: Gendering Place in Early Modern London, examines depi...
Printed books were an urban phenomenon. Isabella Whitney famously sends her readers to St. Paul’s Ch...
This dissertation investigates the representation, in fiction, of London's spaces of pleasure, in th...
The dominant model of female authorship from 1690 to 1740 is London-centred, professional and fictio...
This thesis argues that the flâneuse is present in literature well before the late nineteenth centur...
This article explores the ways in which mid-Tudor writing addressed and imagined the city of London....
A chapter from Genre and Women’s Life Writing in Early Modern England. By taking account of the ways...
This dissertation focuses on the particular ways in which early modern English playwrights connect g...
Restricted until 21 July 2010.Frequently in early modern London, as Elizabeth Fowler aptly put it, ...
A Bag of Tricks: Literary Tricksters as Mediators of Changing Gender Roles in Early Modern London. D...
This dissertation examines how and why novelists depict their heroines being plunged into the sensor...
The paper intends to provide a reflection on the role of literary imagination in shaping the identit...
In Tudor and Stuart Britain, women writers were shaped by their culture, but they also helped to sha...