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*Henriette GOLDWYN<br> *Henriette GOLDWYN<br>
-**Les prophetesses des Cévennes. Strange Language and Practices of Disorder: the Prophetic Crisis in France following the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685<br><br><br>+**Les prophétesses des Cévennes. Strange Language and Practices of Disorder: the Prophetic Crisis in France following the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685<br><br><br>
'''Part 2: Women writing the Nation'''<br><br> '''Part 2: Women writing the Nation'''<br><br>
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*Alejandro HERMIDA<br> *Alejandro HERMIDA<br>
-**Women Writers and the Rise of Czech and Slovak Modern Identity<br><br>+**The Role of Bozena Nemcova in the Construction of Czech and Slovak Cultural Identity<br><br>
*Nadezhda ALEXANDROVA<br> *Nadezhda ALEXANDROVA<br>
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*Kati LAUNIS<br> *Kati LAUNIS<br>
-**Towards More Equal Nation: Russian-Finnish Author Marie Linder (1840–1870)<br><br>+**The Vision of an Equal Nation: Russian-Finnish Author Marie Linder (1840–1870)<br><br>
*Jenny BERGENMAR<br> *Jenny BERGENMAR<br>
-**The Author and the Spinster : Selma Lagerlöf, Frederika Bremer and Women as Nations Builders<br><br>+**Selma Lagerlöf, Frederika Bremer and Women as Nations Builders<br><br>
*Viola PARENTE-CAPKOVA<br> *Viola PARENTE-CAPKOVA<br>
-**Decadent Women Telling Nations: L. Onerva and Her ‘Upstarts’<br><br><br>+**Decadent Women Telling Nations Differently: The Finish Writer L. Onerva and Her Motherless Dilettante ‘Upstarts’<br><br><br>
'''Part 3: Women in networks'''<br><br> '''Part 3: Women in networks'''<br><br>
*Hilde HOOGENBOOM<br> *Hilde HOOGENBOOM<br>
-**The Community of Letters and the Nation State: Bio-Bibliographic Compilations as a Transnational Genre<br><br>+**The Community of Letters and the Nation State: Bio-Bibliographic Compilations as a Transnational Genre around 1700<br><br>
*Rotraud VON KULESSA<br> *Rotraud VON KULESSA<br>
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*Elena GRETCHANAIA<br> *Elena GRETCHANAIA<br>
-**Entre le mythe national et l’idéal transfrontalier : la représentation des nations dans les écrits des femmes russes rédigés en français (XVIIIe – début XIXe siècle<br><br>+**Between National Myth and Trans-national ideal: The Representation of Nations in the French-Language Writings of Russian Women (1770-1819)<br><br>
*Begoña LASA<br> *Begoña LASA<br>

Revision as of 11:18, 22 August 2014


"Women Writers in History, volume I"



Women Telling Nations

Amelia Sanz, Francesca Scott and Suzan van Dijk eds.
Amsterdam, Rodopi, 2014


Table of contents


  • Amelia SANZ and Suzan van DIJK
    • Introduction


Part 1: Women belonging to nations

  • Madeleine JEAY
    • Medieval Women Networking before the Appearance of Nations

  • Inês de ORNELLAS de CASTRO
    • Latine loquor: women acquiring auctoritas (Portugal 1500-1800)

  • Nieves BARANDA
    • Beyond Political Boundaries: Religion as Nation in Early Modern Spain

  • M. Jesús PANDO
    • Expatriates: women communities, mobility and cosmopolitanism in early modern Europe: English and Spanish nuns in Flanders

  • Henriette GOLDWYN
    • Les prophétesses des Cévennes. Strange Language and Practices of Disorder: the Prophetic Crisis in France following the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685


Part 2: Women writing the Nation

  • Biljana DOJCINOVIC and Ivana PANTELIC
    • Early Modern Women Intellectuals in 19th Centuries Serbia : Milica Stojadinovic, Draga Dejanovic and Milica Tomic

  • Alejandro HERMIDA
    • The Role of Bozena Nemcova in the Construction of Czech and Slovak Cultural Identity

  • Nadezhda ALEXANDROVA
    • A Queen of Many Kingdoms : The Autobiography of Rayna Knjaginja

  • Katja MIHURKO Poniz
    • The Representations of Slavic Nations in the Writings of Josipina Turnograiska

  • Ileana MIHAILA
    • Dora d’Istria and the Springtime of the peoples in Southeast European Nations

  • Kati LAUNIS
    • The Vision of an Equal Nation: Russian-Finnish Author Marie Linder (1840–1870)

  • Jenny BERGENMAR
    • Selma Lagerlöf, Frederika Bremer and Women as Nations Builders

  • Viola PARENTE-CAPKOVA
    • Decadent Women Telling Nations Differently: The Finish Writer L. Onerva and Her Motherless Dilettante ‘Upstarts’


Part 3: Women in networks

  • Hilde HOOGENBOOM
    • The Community of Letters and the Nation State: Bio-Bibliographic Compilations as a Transnational Genre around 1700

  • Rotraud VON KULESSA
    • Anthologies of female Italian authors and the emergence of a national identity in 19th century Italy

  • Maarit LESKELA
    • Histories of women, histories of nation : Biographical writing as women’s tradition in Finland, 1880-1920s

  • Sirmoula ALEXANDRIDOU
    • Early women’s Press: A challenge for the 19th century East and Greece

  • Henriette PARTZSCH
    • Connecting People, Inventing Communities in Faustina Sáez de Melgar's Magazine La Violeta (1862-1866)


Part 4: Women looking elsewhere

  • Joanna PARTYKA
    • Overpassing state and cultural borders: a Polish female doctor in 18th-century Constantinople

  • Elena GRETCHANAIA
    • Between National Myth and Trans-national ideal: The Representation of Nations in the French-Language Writings of Russian Women (1770-1819)

  • Begoña LASA
    • Regina Maria Roche and Ireland: A Problematic Relationship

  • Carmen Beatrice DUTU
    • Amor Vincit (R)om(a)nia: Reshaping identities in Romanian mid-19th-century culture

  • Senem TIMUROGLU
    • Women’s Nations from Ottoman to the new Republic in Fatma Aliye and Halide Edip Evar’s Writing




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