Familiar Letters
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The Familiar Letter in Early Modern English
Author | : Susan M. Fitzmaurice |
Publisher | : John Benjamins Publishing |
Total Pages | : 288 |
Release | : 2002 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 9781588111869 |
This research monograph examines familiar letters in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century English to provide a pragmatic reading of the meanings that writers make and readers infer. The first part of the book presents a method of analyzing historical texts. The second part seeks to validate this method through case studies that illuminate how modern pragmatic theory may be applied to distant speech communities in both history and culture in order to reveal how speakers understand one another and how they exploit intended and unintended meanings for their own communicative ends. The analysis demonstrates the application of pragmatic theory (including speech act theory, deixis, politeness, implicature, and relevance theory) to the study of historical, literary and fictional letters from extended correspondences, producing an historically informed, richly situated account of the meanings and interpretations of those letters that a close reading affords. This book will be of interest to scholars of the history of the English language, historical pragmatics, discourse analysis, as well as to social and cultural historians, and literary critics.
Letters Familiar and Formal
Author | : Arcangela Tarabotti |
Publisher | : Acmrs Publications |
Total Pages | : 319 |
Release | : 2012 |
Genre | : Benedictine nuns |
ISBN | : 9780772721327 |
Coerced into taking the veil, Venetian writer Arcangela Tarabotti (1604-1652) spent her life protesting the practice of forcing girls into convents. Her fearless defense of women and attacks on patriarchal Venetian society earned her renown and access to the presses. Her publications, however, invited constant controversy. Tarabotti published her Letters Familiar and Formal to protect and enhance her literary reputation while also chronicling contemporary literary society and material existence in an early modern convent. The Letters flaunted Tarabotti's literary accomplishments, humiliated her critics, and advertised her powerful network of allies in Northern Italy and France. The Letters document how Tarabotti established herself as one of the most forceful proponents for women's self-determination in early modern Europe.
Letters on Familiar Matters
Author | : Francesco Petrarca |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 386 |
Release | : 1985 |
Genre | : Authors, Italian |
ISBN | : |
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu and the Eighteenth-Century Familiar Letter
Author | : Cynthia J. Lowenthal |
Publisher | : University of Georgia Press |
Total Pages | : 274 |
Release | : 2010-07-01 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 0820336939 |
This is is the first critical study of one of the most important women writers of the early eighteenth century, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (1689–1762), who produced a body of erudite and entertaining correspondence that spanned more than fifty years. Lady Mary's letters illuminate the difficulties encountered by a sensitive, intelligent, and gifted woman writer living through an era of significant cultural change. These letters display the tensions inherent in the competing demands of public and private life, revealing Lady Mary's own discomfort about the problems of authorship and authority in an age that held publication to be an improper activity for respectable women. Through the discourse of supposedly “private” letters, Lady Mary was able to find an avenue for her talents that brought her “public” stature without violating the imperatives of her position as a woman and an aristocrat. Cynthia Lowenthal argues persuasively that Lady Mary's letters, themselves central to the establishment of the familiar letter as an important eighteenthcentury genre, were self-consciously constructed as literary artifacts and crafted as part of a larger female epistolary tradition. Moreover, Lowenthal contends, the works of Lady Mary are essential to the feminist recuperation of women's writing precisely because she provided an aristocratic critique—a voice often ignored—of the class and gender codes of her day.
The Familiar Letter as a Literary Genre in the Age of Pushkin
Author | : William Mills Todd |
Publisher | : Northwestern University Press |
Total Pages | : 252 |
Release | : 1999 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 9780810117112 |
This text examines the tradition of familiar letter writing that developed in the early 1800s among the Arzamasians, a literary circle that included such luminaries as Pushkin, Karamzin and Turgenev, and argues that these letters constitute a distinct literary genre. Todd gives a thorough prehistory of the convention of correspondence and concentrates on the themes, strategies, and autobiographical functions of the letter for several master writers in Pushkin's time. It is written in an accessible style with translations, an annotated list of the Arzamasians, and an extensive index and a bibliography.