Loading...

«I’le to My Self, and to My Muse Be True»

Strategies of Self-Authorization in Eighteenth-Century Women Poetry

by Kirsten Juhas (Author)
©2008 Thesis 318 Pages

Summary

In their verse, many British women composing poetry in the long eighteenth century wrote about and reflected on the very process of writing itself. In doing so, they often imitated and adapted specific poetic topoi, motifs, and generic patterns established by their male predecessors and peers including, among others, Homer, Ovid, and Juvenal, Dryden, Pope, and Swift. In exploring the phallic connotations of ‘pen and ink’, in invoking the assistance of a personal muse, in writing sharp and effective ‘self-satires’, and in identifying themselves with Philomela, the mythological persona of the nightingale, women like Anne Finch, Mary Chudleigh, Sarah Dixon, Mary Leapor, Anna Letitia Barbauld, and Charlotte Smith fashioned and authorized themselves as (female) poets.

Details

Pages
318
Year
2008
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631581421
Language
English
Keywords
Frauenlyrik Musenanruf Metafiktion Geschlechterrolle Geschichte 1700-1800 Schreibwerkzeug Lyrik /17. Jahrhundert Satire Englisch Motiv der Nachtigall Lyrik /18. Jahrhundert
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2008. 318 pp.

Biographical notes

Kirsten Juhas (Author)

The Author: Kirsten Juhas studied English language and literature, German language and literature, and Cultural Studies at the Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität, Münster. From 1998 to 2003, she worked as a Research Assistant at the English Department as well as at the Ehrenpreis Centre for Swift Studies. She submitted her doctoral dissertation to the University’s Faculty of Arts in 2007.

Previous

Title: «I’le to My Self, and to My Muse Be True»