Women'S Literary Education, c. 1690 1850

Louise Joy editor Jessica Lim editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Edinburgh University Press

Published:14th Feb '23

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Women'S Literary Education, c. 1690 1850 cover

Studies how women writers shaped long-eighteenth-century educational discourse through literature Brings together researchers from a range of disciplinary areas: literary studies, history, book history, eighteenth-and-nineteenth-century studies, gender studies, the history of philosophy, the history of education, theological studies, and childhood studies Focuses its study on the literary forms, techniques and genres deployed by female authors in the period Examines female educationalists' interaction with: forms such as the novel, the conversational primer, children's poetry, non-fiction textbooks; the Classics; theories of translation; psychology; theories of pedagogy; practices in relation to literacy; and politics This volume brings together leading critical voices from a range of disciplines to examine the complex and profoundly significant ways in which female literary artists interrogated and advanced educational philosophy and practice. The volume recreates the plurality and non-linearity of the conversations and forms of literary expression that took place in and through this body of educational writing. Literature and education in the long eighteenth century share certain perceived aims: the transmission of knowledge, strengthening of understanding, acculturation, and sometimes empowerment. They also share structural forms: lessons; conversations; letters; dramatizations; confessions; narratives; imitations; sometimes fantasies. In the long eighteenth century, authors of literary texts were often authors of educational treatises who saw their activities in both spheres as interrelated. As such, the parties of teacher and pupil, author and reader frequently overlap. This book provides a historically sensitive understanding of the fraught relations between these parties, drawing attention to the period's debates about authority and freedom as they relate to matters of gender, race, religion, age, and class. This project provides a nuanced understanding of women's literary contributions to the period's strands of educational thought, enabling us to better understand the many and complicated ways in which authors and readers of the period envisaged that literary texts might fulfil, fail, or refuse to fulfil, educational functions.

"This rich collection charts the creative mixture of experimentalism and tenderness that informed the growing field of educational literature authored by women 1690-1850. Education in and through literary print forms promoted imaginative collaboration between adults and children. Where women were made responsible for education or claimed it, they also complicated the femininity that was learned. A dazzling variety of genres and voices are brought to new prominence." -Ros Ballaster, University of Oxford, Mansfield College

ISBN: 9781474497343

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

356 pages