1st Edition

Women and Print Culture (Routledge Revivals) The Construction of Femininity in the Early Periodical

By Kathryn Shevelow Copyright 1989
    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    With the growth of popular literary forms, particularly the periodical, during the eighteenth century, women began to assume an unprecedented place in print culture as readers and writers. Yet at the same time the very textual practices of that culture inscribed women within an increasingly restrictive and oppressive set of representations. First published in 1989, this title examines the emergence and dramatic growth of periodical literature, showing how the journals solicited women as subscribers and contributors, whilst also attempting to regulate their conduct through the promotion of exemplary feminine types. By enclosing its female readership within a discourse that defined women in terms of love, matrimony, the family, and the home, the English periodical became one of the main linguistic sites for the construction of the eighteenth-century ideology of domestic womanhood.

    Based on the close scrutiny of the popular periodical press between 1690 and 1760, including journals such as the Athenian Mercury, the Tatler, and the Spectator, this study will be of particular value to any student of the relationship between women and print culture, the development of women’s magazines, and the study of literary audiences.

    Acknowledgments;  1. ‘Fair-sexing it’: an introduction to periodical literature and the eighteenth-century construction of femininity  2. Early periodicals and their readers  3. Readers as writers: the female subject in the Athenian Mercury  4. ‘A sort of sex in souls’: the Tatler and the Spectator  5. Gender specialization and the feminine curriculum: the periodical for women;  Afterword;  Notes;  Works cited;  Index

    Biography

    Kathryn Shevelow