Through the Reading Glass: Women, Books, and Sex in the French Enlightenment

· State University of New York Press
Ebook
276
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

2005 CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title

Through the Reading Glass explores the practices and protocols that surrounded women's reading in eighteenth-century France. Looking at texts as various as fairy tales, memoirs, historical romances, short stories, love letters, novels, and the pages of the new female periodical press, Suellen Diaconoff shows how a reading culture, one in which books, sex, and acts of reading were richly and evocatively intertwined, was constructed for and by women. Diaconoff proposes that the underlying discourse of virtue found in women's work was both an empowering strategy, intended to create new kinds of responsible and not merely responsive readers, and an integral part of the conviction that domestic reading does not have to be trivial.

About the author

Suellen Diaconoff is Professor of French at Colby College. She is the author of Eros and Power in "Les Liaisons Dangereuses": A Study in Evil.

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