The almanac genre was immensely popular throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Yet published almanacs for women were nonexistent at the turn of the eighteenth century. This dissertation, drawing on archival research undertaken in Great Britain and North America, foregrounds The Ladies’ Diary, a pioneering almanac for women, from its founding in 1704 until 1753, a period when the publication’s character and influence were established. Though scholars increasingly acknowledge the significance of almanacs as cultural catalysts, they have rarely attended to the eighteenth-century almanac for women. My examination contextualizes the genre broadly according to its instructional, creative, and social functions. The Diary was one of t...
This is a study of ‘female space’ in two eighteenth-century periodicals: The Spectator (1711-1712) a...
AbstractOur purpose is to view the mathematical contribution of The Ladies' Diary as a whole. We sha...
In 1835 a ‘mysterious little book’ was reviewed in both medical journals and women’s magazines: Dr A...
AbstractThe existence of the Ladies' Diary or the Woman's Almanack, an 18th century English magazine...
An exploration of one of the most common but least studied early modern forms of life-writing, the a...
This article examines two genres of text which were extremely popular in the late-medieval and early...
While 18th-century almanacs transmitted usable information that was meant to be relevant to daily li...
My dissertation is a compilation, contextualization, and analysis of thirty-five Stuart women's diar...
AbstractWhat was the extent of women's interest in and practice of mathematics in Britain in the 18t...
This dissertation examines a group of female writers in the eighteenth century, the Countess of Winc...
The thesis analyzes the extent to which English and Scottish women participated in the thriving manu...
Description based on: 1708; imprint varies.Printed in red and black.Compilers: 1704-1713, John Tippe...
Printed almanacs in the Danish language are preserved from the sixteenth century. The production of ...
This is a study of ‘female space’ in two eighteenth-century periodicals: The Spectator (1711-1712) a...
The history of early modern reading has long been based on narratives of long-term change, tracing t...
This is a study of ‘female space’ in two eighteenth-century periodicals: The Spectator (1711-1712) a...
AbstractOur purpose is to view the mathematical contribution of The Ladies' Diary as a whole. We sha...
In 1835 a ‘mysterious little book’ was reviewed in both medical journals and women’s magazines: Dr A...
AbstractThe existence of the Ladies' Diary or the Woman's Almanack, an 18th century English magazine...
An exploration of one of the most common but least studied early modern forms of life-writing, the a...
This article examines two genres of text which were extremely popular in the late-medieval and early...
While 18th-century almanacs transmitted usable information that was meant to be relevant to daily li...
My dissertation is a compilation, contextualization, and analysis of thirty-five Stuart women's diar...
AbstractWhat was the extent of women's interest in and practice of mathematics in Britain in the 18t...
This dissertation examines a group of female writers in the eighteenth century, the Countess of Winc...
The thesis analyzes the extent to which English and Scottish women participated in the thriving manu...
Description based on: 1708; imprint varies.Printed in red and black.Compilers: 1704-1713, John Tippe...
Printed almanacs in the Danish language are preserved from the sixteenth century. The production of ...
This is a study of ‘female space’ in two eighteenth-century periodicals: The Spectator (1711-1712) a...
The history of early modern reading has long been based on narratives of long-term change, tracing t...
This is a study of ‘female space’ in two eighteenth-century periodicals: The Spectator (1711-1712) a...
AbstractOur purpose is to view the mathematical contribution of The Ladies' Diary as a whole. We sha...
In 1835 a ‘mysterious little book’ was reviewed in both medical journals and women’s magazines: Dr A...