In response to a growing interest, among historians as well as
literary critics, in women's use of the epistolary genre, Women's
Letters Across Europe, 1400-1700: Form and Persuasion analyzes
persuasive techniques in the personal correspondence of late
medieval and early modern women. It includes studies of well-known
women (Isabella d'Este, Teresa of Avila, Marguerite de Navarre,
Catherine de Medicis), of those less-known (Alessandra Macigni
Strozzi, Louise de Coligny, Glikl of Hameln, Argula von Grumbach,
Luisa de Carvajal y Mendoza, Anna Maria von Schurman, Barbara of
Brandenburg ) and of others virtually unknown to history
(prosperous women like Elizabeth Stonor and Cornelia Collonello and
pauper women seeking poor relief in Tours). Comprehensive in scope,
Women's Letters Across Europe, 1400-1700 looks at women from
England, Italy, France, Spain, Germany, and the Netherlands, and
from various levels of society, encompassing the nobility, the
gentry, the middle class, and the poor. Each of the essayists
considers letters both as historical documents giving insights into
women's lives, and as texts in which variations on epistolary forms
are used for specific persuasive purposes. The authors of the
essays analyze their subjects' capabilities and limitations as
letter writers and the techniques they used to influence
correspondents, setting these observations in the framework of the
women's particular 'stories.' Taken together, the essays and the
letter writers discussed therein illustrate in new ways how far
from silenced many early modern women were, how they were able to
adopt and adapt strategies from the epistolary conventions
available to them, and how they could have an impact on their
worlds through their letters.
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