"Wielding the Pen" presents a wide spectrum of
nineteenth-century American women's writings on the themes of
authorship and creativity. These works reflect the fears, desires,
and motivations of female authors, as well as the opportunities and
obstacles they encountered as professional writers.
Anne E. Boyd includes representative samples from a diverse
range of writers. These writings, some of which are reprinted here
for the first time, challenge prevailing notions about women and
authorship in the nineteenth century and shed light on the
relationship between women's lives as writers and their evolving
roles in the larger, male-dominated literary community.
Boyd uses these essays, letters, poetry, fiction, and reviews to
examine varied experiences of authorship. Here are the voices of
women writers speaking about the hardships and rewards of
authorship, responding to male critics, and encouraging and warning
young, aspiring writers who would join them in the ranks of
professional writing.
Boyd's introduction places the views of female writers on
authorship into historical perspective, and brief biographical and
critical sketches of each author and their work are also included.
The texts are presented chronologically and are indexed by author,
genre, theme, and region.
This anthology of primary materials--the words of American women
writers on the act of authorship and their participation in the
literary cultures of the nineteenth century-- offers revealing
insight into Hawthorne's "damned mob of scribbling women."
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