Mere Bagatelles Women's Diaries from Ireland, 1760–1810
Materialtyp:
ArtikelUtgivningsinformation: Liverpool University Press 2024Beskrivning: 1 electronic resource (256 p.)Innehållstyp: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781835537268
- 9781835537275
- 1 Place qualifiers
- 1D Europe
- 1DD Western Europe
- 1DDR Ireland
- 3 Time period qualifiers
- 3M c 1500 onwards to present day
- 3ML 18th century
- 3MLQ Later 18th century c 1750 to c 1799
- 3MLQS c 1760 to c 1769
- 3MLQV c 1770 to c 1779
- 3MLQX c 1780 to c 1789
- 3MLQZ c 1790 to c 1799
- 3MN 19th century
- 3MNB Early 19th century c 1800 to c 1850
- 3MNBA c 1800 to c 1809
- D Biography
- DS Literature
- DSB Literary studies
- DSBD Literary studies
- DSK Literary studies
- Irish literature
- Literature and Literary studies
- N History and Archaeology
- NH History
- NHD European history
- NHT History
- NHTB Social and cultural history
- c 1600 to c 1800
- c 1700 to c 1799
- c 1800 to c 1899
- eighteenth-century literature
- fiction
- gender
- general
- history and criticism
- life writing
- manuscript culture
- novelists and prose writers
- specific events and topics
- thema EDItEUR
Open Access Unrestricted online access star
Engaging with previously overlooked diaries by women in Ireland, written between 1760 and 1810, this book opens new avenues concerning authorship and female agency, transforming our understanding of women's contributions to both literature and culture. The result of extensive archival research across multiple international archives, this book presents an entirely new corpus that demonstrates the creativity and literary capabilities of women in this period. The surviving diaries showcase these women's engagement with a form that allowed them to explore their subjectivity and to experiment with the presentation of self. This book demonstrates how these 'bagatelles' should be treated as literary works that were shaped by, and in turn influenced, wider cultures of reading and writing, underlining the generic fluidity at play. The diary form forces a dismantling of the neat binaries of public and private, of imaginative and non-imaginative prose writing, complicating our understandings of each. The content of these diaries prompts a re-evaluation of the very contours of Irish writing and what we consider as literature, while allowing us to rediscover the importance of manuscripts to our explorations of literary culture.
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Funded by: H2020 European Research Council
Creative Commons Licence cc by-nc-nd cc https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
eng
Freely available e-book