The author's name appears respectfully as Mris [i.e. Mistress] Anna Hume. The main title-page prints Love, Chastitie, and Death one below the other and brackets them. The Triumph of Chastitie and The...
Reception
Lucy Hutchinson
Since her tally of works in print began to climb steeply in the 1990s, anthologists Jane Stevenson
and Peter Davidson
have called LHone of the most important poets, man or woman, of the mid-century...
Material Conditions of Writing
Elinor James
The count of ninety of EJ
's writings surviving has been raised from a previous but still recent estimate of about fifty known. The English Short Title Catalogue lists twenty titles beginning with the words...
Textual Production
Anne Locke
Scholarly attention paid to the formerly almost invisible AL
dates back forty years, to 1965 and Patrick Collinson
's The Role of Women in the English Reformation Illustrated by the Life and Friendships of Anne...
Publishing
Elizabeth Major
Her writings, EM
says, were like honey on a rod of correction: they are good results from her illness, a blessing from God. To make them public was her Christian duty. She has been edited...
Today DM
's stock is high, but she is less studied than many of her contemporaries. Her choice of genres and her close involvement with the political and other affairs of her time make her...
Janet Mueller followed her facsimile edition for the AshgateEarly Modern Englishwoman series, 1996, with Katherine Parr: Complete Works and Correspondence, 2011.
Anthologization
Mary Penington
Printed in his Works, 1681, this brief tribute to my dear and precious one
Penington, Mary, and Isaac Penington. “Testimony Concerning Her Dear Husband”. The Works of the Long-Mournful and Sorely-Distressed Isaac Penington, Benjamin Clark.
xxviii
was reprinted in the Ashgate
series Early Modern Englishwoman. Printed Writings, 1641-1700: Life Writings 2, selected and introduced...
Publishing
Diana Primrose
The full title of this tribute (to a reign which had ended a generation previously) was A Chaine of Pearle; or, a Memorial of the Peerles [sic] Graces and Heroick Vertues of Queen Elizabeth, of...
The full title was The Learned Maid; or, Whether a Maid may be a Scholar? A Logick exercise written in Latine by that incomparable virgin Anna Maria à Schurman of Utrecht. With some epistles to...
Publishing
Rachel Speght
RS
's poetical works are available in facsimile in the AshgateEarly Modern Englishwoman series.
Textual Production
Isabella Whitney
IW
's works are available in facsimile in the AshgateEarly Modern Englishwoman series.
Timeline
No timeline events available.
Texts
Hunt, Karen. “Gendering the Politics of the Working Woman’s Home”. Women and the Making of Built Space in England, 1870-1950, Ashgate, 2007, pp. 106-21.
Kelley, Anne. Catharine Trotter: An Early Modern Writer in the Vanguard of Feminism. Ashgate, 2002.
Kestner, Joseph A. Sherlock’s Sisters: The British Female Detective, 1864-1913. Ashgate, 2003.
Khanna, Lee Cullen, and Lee Cullen Khanna. “Introductory Note”. Early Tudor Translators: Margaret Beaufort, Margaret More Roper and Mary Basset, Ashgate, 2001, p. ix - xii.
Kietzman, Mary Jo. The Self-fashioning of an Early Modern Englishwoman: Mary Carleton’s lives. Ashgate, 2004.
Owen, Jane. “Introductory Note”. Jane Owen, edited by Dorothy L. Latz, Ashgate, 2000, p. ix - xiii.
Liggins, Emma. “Good Housekeeping? Domestic Economy and Suffering Wives in Mrs. Henry Wood’s Early Fiction”. Feminist Readings of Victorian Popular Texts: Divergent Femininities, edited by Emma Liggins and Daniel Duffy, Ashgate, 2001, pp. 53-68.
Luria, Gina M. Mary Hays (1759-1843): The Growth of a Woman’s Mind. Ashgate, 2006.
Lusty, Natalya. “Eating the Maid: Leonora Carrington’s ’The Debutante’”. Challenging Modernism: New Readings in Literature and Culture, 1914-1945, edited by Stella Dean, Ashgate, 2002, pp. 163-85.
Mattacks, Kate. “After Lady Audley: M.E. Braddon, the Actress and the Act of Writing in <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl=‘m’>Hostages to Fortune</span>”;. Feminst Readings of Victorian Popular Texts: Divergent Femininities, edited by Emma Liggins and Daniel Duffy, Ashgate, 2001, pp. 69-88.
James, Elinor. “Introductory Note”. Elinor James, edited by Paula McDowell, Ashgate, 2005, p. v - xxviii.
Melvill, Elizabeth. “Ane Godlie Dreame”. The Poets, I, edited by Susanne Woods et al., Ashgate, 2001.
More, Hannah. The Literary Manuscripts and Letters of Hannah More. Editor Smith, Nicholas D., Ashgate, 2008.
Mullan, David George, editor. Women’s Life Writing in Early Modern Scotland: Writing the Evangelical Self, c. 1670-c. 1730. Ashgate, 2003.
Mutch, Deborah. English Socialist Periodicals, 1880-1900. Ashgate, 2005.
Osborne, Dorothy. Dorothy Osborne: Letters to Sir William Temple, 1652-54. Editor Parker, Kenneth, Ashgate, 2001.
Owen, Jane. Jane Owen. Editor Latz, Dorothy L., Ashgate, 2000.
Primrose, Diana. “A Chaine of Pearle”. The Poets I, edited by Susanne Woods et al., Facsimile, Ashgate, 2001.
Recchio, Thomas. Elizabeth Gaskell’s Cranford, A Publishing History. Ashgate, 2009.
Remy, Michel. Surrealism in Britain. Ashgate, 1999.
Roche, Thomas P., and Anna Hume. “Introductory Note”. Anna Hume, edited by Thomas P. Roche and Thomas P. Roche, Ashgate, 2006, p. ix - xx.
Roper, Margaret, and Lee Cullen Khanna. “A Devout Treatise upon the Pater Noster”. Early Tudor Translators: Margaret Beaufort, Margaret More Roper and Mary Basset, Ashgate, 2001.
Hopton, Susanna. “Introductory Note”. Susanna Hopton, edited by Julia J. Smith, Ashgate, 2010, p. ix - xxiii.