Front cover image for Dido's daughters : literacy, gender, and empire in early modern England and France

Dido's daughters : literacy, gender, and empire in early modern England and France

Our common definition of literacy is the ability to read and write in one language. But as Margaret Ferguson reveals in Dido's Daughters, this description is inadequate, because it fails to help us understand heated conflicts over literacy during the emergence of print culture. The fifteenth through seventeenth centuries, she shows, were a contentious era of transition from Latin and other clerical modes of literacy toward more vernacular forms of speech and writing. Fegurson's aim in this long-awaited work is twofold: to show that what counted as more valuable among these competing literacies had much to do with notions of gender, and to demonstrate how debates about female literacy were critical to the emergence of imperial nations. Looking at writers whom she dubs the figurative daughters of the mythological figure Dido-builder of an empire that threatened to rival Rome-Ferguson traces debates about literacy and empire in the works of Marguerite de Navarre, Christine de Pizan, Elizabeth Cary, and Aphra Behn, as well as male writers such as Shakespeare, Rabelais, and Wyatt. The result is a study that sheds new light on the crucial roles that gender and women played in the modernization of England and France
Print Book, English, ©2003
University of Chicago Press, Chicago, ©2003
History
xiv, 506 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
9780226243115, 9780226243122, 0226243117, 0226243125
50782529
Competing concepts of literacy in imperial contexts: definitions, debates, interpretive models
Sociolinguistic matrices for early modern literacies: paternal Latin, mother tongues, and illustrious vernaculars
Discourses of imperial nationalism as matrices for early modern literacies
An empire of her own: literacy as appropriation in Christine de Pizan's Livre de la cité des dames
Making the world anew: female literacy as reformation and translation in Marguerite de Navarre's Heptaméron
Allegories of imperial subjection: literacy as equivocation in Elizabeth Cary's Tragedy of Mariam
New world scenes from a female pen: literacy as colonization in Aphra Behn's Widdow Ranter and Oroonoko
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