Lanyer, Aemilia - Tina Krontiris (essay date 1992)
Tina Krontiris (essay date 1992)
SOURCE: Krontiris, Tina. “Women of the Jacobean Court Defending Their Sex.” In Oppositional Voices: Women as Writers and Translators of Literature in the English Renaissance, pp. 102-20. London: Routledge, 1992.
[In the following excerpt, Krontiris elucidates the strategies employed by Lanyer to gain financial compensation and acceptance as a female writer.]
The Jacobean period was a time of advances in the status of women. Comparing it to earlier periods, Retha Warnicke states that it is the one most deserving the label ‘golden.’1 Many more women than before were receiving some form of education, and more female precedents had been established in publishing and patronizing books. The theatre was paying more attention to women, and though most dramatists simply exploited the gender issue, some were questioning traditional notions.2 The court itself was relaxing its...
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Criticism
- Barbara K. Lewalski (essay date 1985)
- Tina Krontiris (essay date 1992)
- Jonathan Goldberg (essay date 1997)
- Barbara K. Lewalski (essay date 1998)
- Marshall Grossman (essay date 1998)
- Achsah Guibbory (essay date 1998)
- Susanne Woods (essay date 1999)
- John Rogers (essay date 2000)
- Susanne Woods (essay date 2000)
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- Michael Morgan Holmes (essay date 2001)
- Barbara E. Bowen (essay date 2001)
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