Elizabeth Cary and Mary Wroth wrote in several of the most popular genres of Renaissance England: drama, history, romance, and sonnet cycle; in doing so, they violated norms of appropriate feminine behavior. The severity of their transgression appears in their writings, which display a discursive discontinuity (Belsey) signalling uncertainty about their textual authority. Reworking generic conventions to accommodate feminine interests, their texts give feminine subjectivity an entry into history and expose the partiality of Renaissance and modern ideas of genres. This dissertation examines representations of feminine subjectivity in texts by Cary, Wroth, and certain male authors. The women uncover interconnections among the various subjec...
This dissertation argues that understandings of gender subtly transformed throughout the sixteenth a...
This dissertation argues that understandings of gender subtly transformed throughout the sixteenth a...
This dissertation investigates the textual gesture whereby a male author--the ladies\u27 man of my t...
Elizabeth Cary and Mary Wroth wrote in several of the most popular genres of Renaissance England: dr...
This project uses constructivist theory to consider female sexual subjectivity in early modern Engli...
This project uses constructivist theory to consider female sexual subjectivity in early modern Engli...
This project uses constructivist theory to consider female sexual subjectivity in early modern Engli...
Students of the Renaissance find themselves mired in debate over the existence of the human subject ...
Lady Mary Wroth (c. 1587-1653) wrote the first sonnet sequence in English by a woman, one of the fir...
The querelle des femmes, or woman question has long been debated with little resolution. Patriarchal...
Historians have analyzed the life of Elizabeth Cary, Lady Falkland, primarily in the context of her ...
The querelle des femmes, or woman question has long been debated with little resolution. Patriarchal...
Historians have analyzed the life of Elizabeth Cary, Lady Falkland, primarily in the context of her ...
This dissertation argues that understandings of gender subtly transformed throughout the sixteenth a...
The querelle des femmes, or woman question has long been debated with little resolution. Patriarchal...
This dissertation argues that understandings of gender subtly transformed throughout the sixteenth a...
This dissertation argues that understandings of gender subtly transformed throughout the sixteenth a...
This dissertation investigates the textual gesture whereby a male author--the ladies\u27 man of my t...
Elizabeth Cary and Mary Wroth wrote in several of the most popular genres of Renaissance England: dr...
This project uses constructivist theory to consider female sexual subjectivity in early modern Engli...
This project uses constructivist theory to consider female sexual subjectivity in early modern Engli...
This project uses constructivist theory to consider female sexual subjectivity in early modern Engli...
Students of the Renaissance find themselves mired in debate over the existence of the human subject ...
Lady Mary Wroth (c. 1587-1653) wrote the first sonnet sequence in English by a woman, one of the fir...
The querelle des femmes, or woman question has long been debated with little resolution. Patriarchal...
Historians have analyzed the life of Elizabeth Cary, Lady Falkland, primarily in the context of her ...
The querelle des femmes, or woman question has long been debated with little resolution. Patriarchal...
Historians have analyzed the life of Elizabeth Cary, Lady Falkland, primarily in the context of her ...
This dissertation argues that understandings of gender subtly transformed throughout the sixteenth a...
The querelle des femmes, or woman question has long been debated with little resolution. Patriarchal...
This dissertation argues that understandings of gender subtly transformed throughout the sixteenth a...
This dissertation argues that understandings of gender subtly transformed throughout the sixteenth a...
This dissertation investigates the textual gesture whereby a male author--the ladies\u27 man of my t...