Women Writing History in Early Modern England

Women Writing History in Early Modern England

by Megan Matchinske (Author)

Synopsis

In 1603 an English gentlewoman, Elizabeth Grymeston, composed for her young son a series of meditations - meditations that would offer posthumous advice and reflection on everything from the nature of sin to the limits of royal authority. Six months later Grymeston was dead and her words memorialized not just for a small boy but also for an English audience eager for moral edification and enlightenment. As one of the first writers of the mother's legacy to appear in England, Grymeston looked to history to find her answers. Using life experience as her witness, she drew immediate and powerful connections between yesterday's actions and tomorrow's possibilities. She was not alone - throughout the seventeenth century, scores of Englishwomen did likewise, exploring in their own 'histories' the shifting relationships between past and future. This book focuses on this dynamic exchange, asking us to look seriously at the ends of history.

$118.99

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 250
Edition: 1
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 14 May 2009

ISBN 10: 0521508673
ISBN 13: 9780521508674

Media Reviews
Review of the hardback: 'Not only is Women Writing History in Early Modern England an impressive contribution to the scholarship on women's historical writing in the early modern period; it constitutes an important theoretical intervention on the relationship between ethics and historiography, and on our own relationship to the past that is the subject of our scholarship. This is a book that scholars of both literature and history will read with great profit.' Literature and History
Author Bio
Megan Matchinske is Associate Professor in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.