Gloriana's Face: Women, Public and Private, in the English Renaissance
1995; Modern Humanities Research Association; Volume: 25; Linguagem: Inglês
10.2307/3508858
ISSN2222-4289
AutoresAnthea Hume, S. P. Cerasano, Marion Wynne-Davies,
Tópico(s)Historical Economic and Social Studies
ResumoFrom myself, my other self I turned - an introduction, S. P. Cerasano, Marion Wynne-Davies Penelope and the politics of woman's place in the Renaissance, Georgianna Ziegler private writing and public function - autobiological texts by Renaissance englishwomen, Helen Wilcox Queen Elizabeth in her speeches, Frances Teague the Queen's masque - Renaissance women and the seventeeth-century court masque, Marion Wynne-Davies Chief Knot of All the Discourse - the maternal subtext tying Sidney's Arcadia to Shakespeare's King Lear, Barbara J. Bono Household Kates - Chez Petruchio, Percy and Plantagenet, Laurie E. Maguire Half a dozen dangerous words, S. P. Cerasano Their testament at their apron-strings - The representation of Puritan women in early seventeenth century England, Akiko Kusunoki Who may binde where God hath loosed? - responses to sectarian women's writing in the second half of the seventeenth century, Hilary Hinds.
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