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Gender Roles, Literary Authority, and Three American Women Writers : Anne Dudley Bradstreet, Mercy Otis Warren, Margaret Fuller Ossoli

Part of the The Age of Revolution and Romanticism Interdisciplinary Studies series
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This text demonstrates the formation and expansion of the role of the New England woman of letters by examining three of the most important women writers between 1620 and 1850: Anne Bradstreet, Mercy Warren, and Margaret Fuller.

The transformation of the New England woman of letters into the professional female author occurs concomitantly with a historical progression, which moves from the provincial to the cosmopolitan to the international, from English patronage to American mercantilism.

In short, New England women writers exploited and legitimated their cultural authority, first by using socially recognized roles and then by using the principles of a post-revolutionary liberal society, that is, a marketplace society, to legitimize a diversity of authoritative actions and positions not linked to traditional gender roles.

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£45.10
Product Details
Peter Lang Publishing Inc
0820425605 / 9780820425603
Hardback
01/12/1995
United States
176 pages
160 x 230 mm, 420 grams
Professional & Vocational Learn More