2017
DOI: 10.1111/lic3.12426
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Bluestocking Studies 2011–2017: The Transnational Turn

Abstract: As international trade, exploration, and communication proliferated in the 18th and early 19th centuries, a significant group of British intellectual women, the Bluestockings, came to recognize themselves as part of a transnational network. They were attentive especially to intellectual pursuits, women's cultural, sociopolitical, and economic interests, and various forms of social progress, and some of these preoccupations developed over the period and fed into first‐wave feminist programs later in the 19th ce… Show more

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“…The British salon is explored in Susan Schmid's (2013) British Literary Salons of the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries , which examines how the salon carried forward Bluestocking traditions. Although the scholarship on Bluestocking culture (including orality) is too vast to address in this essay, I recommend Debora Heller's (2011) and Alessa John's (2017) review essays in Literature Compass , as well as Schellenberg (2010) and Elizabeth Eger's (2010) study grappling with the “breadth and diversity of cultural work” (p. 5) by women, in correspondence, conversation and print, Bluestockings: Women of Reason from Enlightenment to Romanticism . Expanding consideration of the flourishing of female writers and female‐led salons outside of Britain to Scotland and Ireland, are Pam Perkins' (2010) Women Writers of the Edinburgh Enlightenment and Amy Prendergast's (2015) Literary Salons Across Britain and Ireland in the Long Eighteenth Century .…”
Section: Manuscript and Print Culturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The British salon is explored in Susan Schmid's (2013) British Literary Salons of the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries , which examines how the salon carried forward Bluestocking traditions. Although the scholarship on Bluestocking culture (including orality) is too vast to address in this essay, I recommend Debora Heller's (2011) and Alessa John's (2017) review essays in Literature Compass , as well as Schellenberg (2010) and Elizabeth Eger's (2010) study grappling with the “breadth and diversity of cultural work” (p. 5) by women, in correspondence, conversation and print, Bluestockings: Women of Reason from Enlightenment to Romanticism . Expanding consideration of the flourishing of female writers and female‐led salons outside of Britain to Scotland and Ireland, are Pam Perkins' (2010) Women Writers of the Edinburgh Enlightenment and Amy Prendergast's (2015) Literary Salons Across Britain and Ireland in the Long Eighteenth Century .…”
Section: Manuscript and Print Culturementioning
confidence: 99%