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    The Eighteenth Century Women

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  1. The hallmarks of the eighteenth century—its opulence, charm, wit, intelligence—are embodied in the age's remarkable women. These women held sway in the salons, in the councils of state, in the ballrooms, in the bedrooms; they enchanted (or intimidated) the most powerful of men and presided over an extraordinary cultural flowering of unprecedented luxury and sophistication.

  2. 23 de ago. de 2021 · On eighteenth-century poetic sociability, and the compilation of manuscript verse miscellanies, see Laura Runge, ‘From Manuscript to Print and Back Again: Two Verse Miscellanies by Eighteenth-Century Women’, Literary Manuscripts: 17th and 18th Century Poetry from the Brotherton Library, University of Leeds, Adam Matthew Digital, 2006; Moyra Haslett, ‘The Poet as Clubman’, in Jack Lynch ...

  3. 27 de jun. de 2024 · Eighteenth-century women’s poetry is now widely accessible in both anthologies and individual scholarly editions, and numerous names have now augmented literary syllabuses – the outspoken teenage poetess Sarah Fyge Egerton; the labouring poets Mary Leapor, Mary Collier and Ann Yearsley; middle-class admirers and followers of Pope and Swift, such as Mary Jones and Mary Barber; those who ...

  4. ABSTRACT. This anthology gathers together various texts by and about women, ranging from `conduct' manuals to pamphlets on prostitution, from medical texts to critical definitions of women's writing, from anti-female satires to appeals for female equality. By making this material more widely available, Women in the Eighteenth Century ...

  5. The hallmarks of the eighteenth century - its opulence, charm, wit, intelligence - are embodied in the age's remarkable women. These women held sway in the salons, in the councils of state, in the ballrooms, in the bedrooms; they enchanted (or intimidated) the most powerful of men and presided over an extraordinary cultural flowering of unprecedented luxury and sophistication.

  6. 6 de jun. de 1982 · The Eighteenth Century Woman: Directed by Suzanne Bauman, Jim Burroughs. With Marisa Berenson, Stella Blum, Diana Vreeland. The 18th-century represents a period of advancement for women at the highest level of society, though often at the expense of the poverty-bound populace. Her inroads into the world of power and influence, unmatched until the present day, are profiled in The Eighteenth ...

  7. The hallmarks of the eighteenth century—its opulence, charm, wit, intelligence—are embodied in the age's remarkable women. These women held sway in the salons, in the councils of state, in the ballrooms, in the bedrooms; they enchanted (or intimidated) the most powerful of men and presided over an extraordinary cultural flowering of unprecedented luxury and sophistication.