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In this book, an international team of specialists examines the dynamic relation between women and the public sphere between 1700 and 1830. Drawing on literary and visual evidence, contributors highlight the range of women's cultural activity during the period, from historiography, publishing and translation to philosophical and political writing. Women, Writing and the Public Sphere examines the history of the public spaces women occupied, raising questions of scandal and display, improvement, virtue and morality in the context of the production and consumption of culture by women in eighteenth-century England.
One of the most international, culturally diverse cities in the
world, London's social and cultural history is steeped in centuries
of migration. This book places migrants at the centre of London's
story, discussing, exploring and celebrating the contribution that
they have made to the city from the medieval period to the present
day. Structured geographically around five sections, each of which
addresses a different area of London (North, East, Central, South
and West) this book features essays from a wide range of
contributors, some of which examine how migrants have shaped
particular places (socially, architecturally, politically), and
some of which analyse how they have been imagined and represented
within those places and the city more widely. The inclusion of
image-led case studies exploring particular buildings, monuments,
artists or institutions offers local examples of how migrant
communities have made their marks on London in different ways.
Using a mixture of in-depth analysis of texts and cultural
artifacts with more synoptic, historical essays, the book builds an
overview of the contribution of migrant communities to the history
and cultures of London. Taken together, these essays paints a rich,
complex picture of cultural London, featuring well-known figures
like Shakespeare, Dostoevsky and Van Gogh in addition to
lesser-known figures like Ignatius Sancho, a former slave and
writer, and contemporary novelist Hanan al-Shaykh. Topics addressed
are rich and varied, from an examination of Chinese aesthetics of
an artefact at the British museum, to an exploration of
representations of black sex workers in 18th C London. Published
amidst the fraught politics of Brexit, the revival of nationalist
sentiments in the global north, and the Covid-19 pandemic, this
book serves as an accessible and timely reminder of the enormous
cultural contributions that migrants have made to Britain’s
capital.
One of the most international, culturally diverse cities in the
world, London's social and cultural history is steeped in centuries
of migration. This book places migrants at the centre of London's
story, discussing, exploring and celebrating the contribution that
they have made to the city from the medieval period to the present
day. Structured geographically around five sections, each of which
addresses a different area of London (North, East, Central, South
and West) this book features essays from a wide range of
contributors, some of which examine how migrants have shaped
particular places (socially, architecturally, politically), and
some of which analyse how they have been imagined and represented
within those places and the city more widely. The inclusion of
image-led case studies exploring particular buildings, monuments,
artists or institutions offers local examples of how migrant
communities have made their marks on London in different ways.
Using a mixture of in-depth analysis of texts and cultural
artifacts with more synoptic, historical essays, the book builds an
overview of the contribution of migrant communities to the history
and cultures of London. Taken together, these essays paints a rich,
complex picture of cultural London, featuring well-known figures
like Shakespeare, Dostoevsky and Van Gogh in addition to
lesser-known figures like Ignatius Sancho, a former slave and
writer, and contemporary novelist Hanan al-Shaykh. Topics addressed
are rich and varied, from an examination of Chinese aesthetics of
an artefact at the British museum, to an exploration of
representations of black sex workers in 18th C London. Published
amidst the fraught politics of Brexit, the revival of nationalist
sentiments in the global north, and the Covid-19 pandemic, this
book serves as an accessible and timely reminder of the enormous
cultural contributions that migrants have made to Britain’s
capital.
In this interdisciplinary volume, an international team of
specialists examine the dynamic relation between women and the
public sphere between 1700 and 1830. Drawing on literary and visual
evidence, contributors highlight the range and diversity of women's
cultural activity during the period, from historiography,
publishing and translation to philosophical and political writing.
Women, Writing and the Public Sphere examines the history of the
public spaces women occupied, raising questions of scandal and
display, improvement, virtue and morality in the context of the
production and consumption of culture by women in
eighteenth-century England. The contribution of educated women to
the British Enlightenment and the role of translation and exchange
between European intellectual movements in shaping ideas of
nationhood is also addressed. This book offers a comprehensive
account of women's philosophical and political reflections on the
nature of their place in the public sphere.
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