Lucy Hutchinson and the English Revolution
Gender, Genre, and History Writing
Claire Gheeraert-Graffeuille author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:10th Oct '22
Should be back in stock very soon
In Lucy Hutchinson and the English Revolution, Claire Gheeraert-Graffeuille explores Lucy Hutchinson's historical writings and the Memoirs of the Life of Colonel Hutchinson, which, although composed between 1664 and 1667, were first published in 1806. The Memoirs were a best-seller in the nineteenth century, but largely fell into oblivion in the twentieth century. They were rediscovered in the late 1980s by historians and literary scholars interested in women's writing, the emerging culture of republicanism, and dissent. By approaching the Memoirs through the prism of history and form, this book challenges the widely-held assumption that early modern women did not - and could not - write the history of wars, a field that was supposedly gendered as masculine. On the contrary, Gheeraert-Graffeuille shows that Lucy Hutchinson, a reader of ancient history and an outstanding Latinist, was a historian of the English Revolution, to be ranked alongside Richard Baxter, Edmund Ludlow, and Edward Hyde.
This is a wonderfully rich study,...We now understand as never before just what is going on in the Memoirs, how the text comes to be as it is, and just how artfully skilful is its author. * N. H. Keeble, University of Stirling, Scotland *
scholarly monograph. * Comptes Rendus *
This book is not only a meticulous and detailed analysis of Hutchinson's Memoir, but it provides a complex, revisionary account of seventeenth-century historiography, and of Hutchinson's place within a tradition that in the past has been dominated by male writers. * Paul Salzman, Parergon 41.1 *
- Winner of Winner, Société d'Etude du XVIIe Siècle Award.
ISBN: 9780192857538
Dimensions: 242mm x 162mm x 28mm
Weight: 716g
368 pages