Females and Footnotes: Excavating the Genre of Eighteenth-Century Women’s Scholarly Verse

Throughout the eighteenth century, the genre of women’s poetry heavily annotated with editorializing commentary (a genre I term “scholarly verse”) became increasingly prevalent. Such poetry presents an ironic reversal of conventions of gender and authority by incorporating the literal margins of the...

Полное описание

Библиографические подробности
Главный автор: Ruth Knezevich
Формат: Статья
Язык:English
Опубликовано: Aphra Behn Society 2016-12-01
Серии:ABO : Interactive Journal for Women in the Arts 1640-1830
Предметы:
Online-ссылка:http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/abo/vol6/iss2/1/
Описание
Итог:Throughout the eighteenth century, the genre of women’s poetry heavily annotated with editorializing commentary (a genre I term “scholarly verse”) became increasingly prevalent. Such poetry presents an ironic reversal of conventions of gender and authority by incorporating the literal margins of the page: the female voice commands the majority of the page, while the masculine voice of empiricism, authority, and scholarly reason is pushed to the margins. This essay offers a distant reading of the range of annotations women poets provided, in order to begin new conversations about the ways women’s poetry served as a site of and structure for intellectual exploration in the eighteenth century.
ISSN:2157-7129
2157-7129