Privacy and Print: Reading and Writing in Seventeenth-century England

Front Cover
University of Virginia Press, 1999 - History - 218 pages

A midst the other religious, political, and technological changes in seventeenth-century England, the ready availability of printed books was the most significant sign of the disappearance of old ways of thinking. The ability to read granted new independence as the interactions among reader, text, and author moved from the public forums of church and court to the privacy and solitude of the home. Privacy and Print proposes that the emergence of the concept of privacy as a personal right, as the very core of individuality, is connected in a complex fashion with the history of reading. Cecile M. Jagodzinski attempts to recover the experience of readers past by examining representations of reading and readers (especially women) in five genres of seventeenth-century literature: devotional books, conversion narratives, personal letters, drama, and the novel. The discussion ranges from the published letters of Charles I and John Donne to Aphra Behn's Love-Letters between a Nobleman and His Sister and Margaret Cavendish's literary activities.

From inside the book

Contents

Reading and the Creation of the Protestant Private Spirit
23
3
56
Reading Personal Letters in Print
74
4
90
5
110
Conclusion
163
Notes
169
Bibliography
195
Index
215
Copyright

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About the author (1999)

Cecile M. Jagodzinski is Associate Professor at the Milner Library at Illinois State University.