Wit, virtue, and emotion: British women's Enlightenment rhetoric

More than a century before first-wave feminism, British women's Enlightenment rhetoric prefigured nineteenth-century feminist arguments for gender equality, women's civil rights, professional opportunities, and standardized education. Author Elizabeth Tasker Davis rereads accepted historie...

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Beteilige Person: Davis, Elizabeth Tasker 1962- (VerfasserIn)
Format: Buch
Sprache:Englisch
Veröffentlicht: Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press [2021]
Schriftenreihe:Studies in rhetorics and feminisms
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Links:http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032968405&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
Zusammenfassung:More than a century before first-wave feminism, British women's Enlightenment rhetoric prefigured nineteenth-century feminist arguments for gender equality, women's civil rights, professional opportunities, and standardized education. Author Elizabeth Tasker Davis rereads accepted histories of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century British rhetoric, claiming a greater variety and power of women's rhetoric. This recovery of British women's performative and written roles as speakers, spectators, authors, and readers in diverse venues counters the traditional masculine model of European Enlightenment rhetoric. Tasker Davis broadens women's Enlightenment rhetorics to include highly public venues such as theaters, clubs, salons, and debating societies, as well as the mediated sites of the periodical essays, treatises on rhetorical theory, and women's written proposals, plans, defenses and arguments for education. Through these sites, women's rhetorical postures diverged from patriarchal prescriptions to deliver protofeminist persuasive performances of wit, virtue, and emotion.
Umfang:xiii, 219 Seiten Illustrationen
ISBN:9780809338276