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Women and Epistolary Agency in Early Modern Culture, 1450–1690
What they wrote: Early Tudor aristocratic women, 1450–1550
monograph
Publication date:
June 10 2016
Publisher:
Routledge
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Women in Science
Author and book information
Book Chapter
Publication date:
June 10 2016
Pages
: 39-51
DOI:
10.4324/9781315546919-11
SO-VID:
bc07e9b7-ef4d-40a5-856d-12b1a5d6eb74
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Book chapters
pp. 17
Living letters: Re-reading correspondence and women’s letters
pp. 39
What they wrote: Early Tudor aristocratic women, 1450–1550
pp. 52
‘By the queen’: Collaborative authorship in scribal correspondence of Queen Elizabeth I
pp. 71
The materiality of early modern women’s letters
pp. 97
Women as counsellors in sixteenth-century England: The letters of Lady Anne Bacon and Lady Elizabeth Russell
pp. 112
The rhetoric of medical authority in Lady Katherine Ranelagh’s letters
pp. 126
John Evelyn, Elizabeth Carey, and the trials of pious friendship
pp. 144
‘Be plyeabell to all good counsell’: Lady Brilliana Harley’s advice letter to her son
pp. 167
Making friends with Elizabeth in the letters of Roger Ascham
pp. 183
Irish women’s letters, 1641–1653
pp. 198
Recovering agency in the epistolary traffic of Frances, Countess of Essex and Jane Daniell
pp. 223
Quaker correspondence: Religious identity and communication networks in the interregnum Atlantic World
pp. 239
New directions in early modern women’s letters: WEMLO’s challenges and possibilities
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