Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The Gentleman's Daughter
The Gentleman's Daughter | Amanda Vickery
3 posts | 3 read | 8 to read
What was the life of an eighteenth-century British genteel woman like? In this lively and controversial book, Amanda Vickery invokes women's own accounts of their intimate and their public lives to argue that in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries the scope of female experience did not diminish--in fact, quite the reverse. Refuting the common understanding that in Georgian times the daughters of merchants, the wives of lawyers, and the sisters of gentlemen lost female freedoms and retreated into their homes, Vickery shows that these women experienced expanding social and intellectual horizons. As they embraced a world far beyond the boundaries of their own parishes through their tireless writing and ravenous reading, genteel women also enjoyed an array of emerging new public arenas--assembly rooms, concert series, theater seasons, circulating libraries, day-time lectures, urban walks, and pleasure gardens. Based on the letters, diaries, and account books of over one hundred women from commercial, professional, and gentry families, this book transforms our understanding of the position of women in Georgian England. In their own words, they tell of their sometimes humorous, sometimes moving experiences and desires, and of their many roles, including kinswoman, wife, mother, housekeeper, consumer, hostess, and member of polite society. By the nineteenth century, family duties continued to dominate women's lives, yet, Vickery contends, the public profile of privileged women had reached unprecedented heights.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
blurb
Moray_Reads
The Gentleman's Daughter | Amanda Vickery
post image

Had a bit of a "women's history" splurge on Ardis...
L-R Big Chief Elizabeth, The Book of Margery Kempe and The Gentleman's Daughter

LeahBergen Nice!! I have the Margery Kempe (isn‘t it a beauty?) 6y
Moray_Reads @LeahBergen it is, such a striking cover 6y
Emilymdxn I adore margery kempe so much!!! Is it the original language? 6y
See All 10 Comments
Moray_Reads @Emilymdxn sadly not, at least the spelling had been modernised 6y
Emilymdxn @Moray_Reads do you know which translation it is? I know a new translation came out like 2 years ago that I haven‘t read but is meant to be amazing 6y
Moray_Reads @Emilymdxn this edition is from 2004 edited by BA Windeatt 6y
Emilymdxn @Moray_Reads I used that edition at uni! I really like it 6y
Moray_Reads @Emilymdxn I've seen the original on dismay at the BL but I've never read it. Looking forward to it! 6y
kspenmoll Gorgeous editions! 6y
batsy Those are beautiful books 💙 6y
60 likes1 stack add10 comments