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Publishing Women's Life Stories in France, 1647-1720 - From Voice to Print (Hardcover, New Ed)
Loot Price: R4,243
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Publishing Women's Life Stories in France, 1647-1720 - From Voice to Print (Hardcover, New Ed)
Series: Women and Gender in the Early Modern World
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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In this new study, Elizabeth Goldsmith continues her pursuit of
issues treated in her earlier books on conversation, epistolary
writing, and the female voice in literature. She examines how
French women in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries
first came to publish their private life stories; in doing so, she
explores what the writers have to say about why they decide to
write about themselves, what they choose to write, how they get
their stories circulated and printed, and what they do to defend
themselves against the threat to personal reputation and
credibility that was implied by such public self-exposure.
Goldsmith scrutinizes the autobiographical writing of six women,
all of whom were, for different reasons, the objects of fairly
intense publicity during their lifetime, at the historical moment
when the idea of "publicity" via the printed word was still a new
concept. Three of the women-Jeanne des Anges, Marie de
l'Incarnation, and Jeanne Guyon-were charismatic religious figures
whose writings were widely circulated. The other three writers-the
sisters Hortense and Marie Mancini, and Madame de Villedieu-are
more worldly, but like their spiritual counterparts, they undertook
self-publication as a form of conversation with the world, and a
way of participating in other forms of public discourse. Publishing
Women's Life Stories in France, 1647-1720 considers the different
forms that the life writing of these three women took:
autobiographies; letter correspondences (which in four of the six
cases have never before been published); trial transcripts;
testimonials published as part of other authors' works; and written
self-portraits that were circulated among friends. Drawing on the
work of Michel de Certeau on voice and communities of readers in
the 17th century, as well as the work of Roger Chartier and other
historians of the book and print culture, Goldsmith retraces the
complicated networks of human interaction that underlie these early
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