Lost Property: The Woman Writer and English Literary History, 1380-1589

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University of Chicago Press, 2000 - 274 páginas
The English literary canon is haunted by the figure of the lost woman writer. In our own age, she has been a powerful stimulus for the rediscovery of works written by women. But as Jennifer Summit argues, "the lost woman writer" also served as an evocative symbol during the very formation of an English literary tradition from the fourteenth through the sixteenth centuries.
Lost Property traces the representation of women writers from Margery Kempe and Christine de Pizan to Elizabeth I and Mary Queen of Scots, exploring how the woman writer became a focal point for emerging theories of literature and authorship in English precisely because of her perceived alienation from tradition. Through original archival research and readings of key literary texts, Summit writes a new history of the woman writer that reflects the impact of such developments as the introduction of printing, the Reformation, and the rise of the English court as a literary center.
A major rethinking of the place of women writers in the histories of books, authorship, and canon-formation, Lost Property demonstrates that, rather than being an unimaginable anomaly, the idea of the woman writer played a key role in the invention of English literature.

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Contenido

I
1
III
22
IV
23
V
33
VI
39
VII
49
VIII
60
IX
61
XVII
111
XVIII
126
XIX
138
XX
157
XXI
162
XXII
163
XXIII
173
XXIV
180

XI
71
XII
81
XIII
93
XIV
108
XV
109
XXV
185
XXVI
193
XXVII
203
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Jennifer Summit is interim provost and vice president for academic affairs at San Francisco State University and the author of Memory's Library: Medieval Books in Early Modern England and Lost Property: The Woman Writer and English Literary History, 1380-1589.

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