Early Modern Exemplars: Reading Strategies and the Assertion of Readerly Identity and Authority in the Life-writing of Mary Ward, Dionys Fitzherbert and Elizabeth Isham

The recent expansion within early modern studies of the application of the generic label “life-writing” has led to the recognition of the literary and cultural value of an array of previously undervalued texts, particularly those written by women. The inclusion of texts that previously sat outside t...

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Main Author: Martin Thompson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte" 2023-06-01
Series:Sillages Critiques
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/14257
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author Martin Thompson
author_facet Martin Thompson
author_sort Martin Thompson
collection DOAJ
description The recent expansion within early modern studies of the application of the generic label “life-writing” has led to the recognition of the literary and cultural value of an array of previously undervalued texts, particularly those written by women. The inclusion of texts that previously sat outside the canon has proved them powerful enough to disrupt and complicate understandings of the genre, and beyond this, the very paradigms upon which the study of autobiographical writing was historically predicated.  This article combines close readings with material analysis of three female-authored autobiographical manuscripts to suggest that, contrary to Western, Protestant and masculine assumptions, these pious seventeenth-century women perceived of themselves primarily not only as authors but readers of their own divinely-authored life stories. Focusing primarily on the paratexts attached to life narratives of Mary Ward (1585-1645), Dionys Fitzherbert (c.1580-c.1642) and Elizabeth Isham (1609-1654), it identifies – across the Reformation confessional divide – common semantic and grammatical patterns which demonstrate that these texts advocated and illustrated particular reading strategies that encouraged their audiences too to see their own lives as texts to be read. It argues that Mary Ward’s Ignatian-inspired texts in particular represent a radical reimagining of the exemplary function of women’s lives. 
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spelling doaj-art-261e71ec5dee45c79f608e64afb762cd2025-01-30T13:47:48ZengCentre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte"Sillages Critiques1272-38191969-63022023-06-013410.4000/sillagescritiques.14257Early Modern Exemplars: Reading Strategies and the Assertion of Readerly Identity and Authority in the Life-writing of Mary Ward, Dionys Fitzherbert and Elizabeth IshamMartin ThompsonThe recent expansion within early modern studies of the application of the generic label “life-writing” has led to the recognition of the literary and cultural value of an array of previously undervalued texts, particularly those written by women. The inclusion of texts that previously sat outside the canon has proved them powerful enough to disrupt and complicate understandings of the genre, and beyond this, the very paradigms upon which the study of autobiographical writing was historically predicated.  This article combines close readings with material analysis of three female-authored autobiographical manuscripts to suggest that, contrary to Western, Protestant and masculine assumptions, these pious seventeenth-century women perceived of themselves primarily not only as authors but readers of their own divinely-authored life stories. Focusing primarily on the paratexts attached to life narratives of Mary Ward (1585-1645), Dionys Fitzherbert (c.1580-c.1642) and Elizabeth Isham (1609-1654), it identifies – across the Reformation confessional divide – common semantic and grammatical patterns which demonstrate that these texts advocated and illustrated particular reading strategies that encouraged their audiences too to see their own lives as texts to be read. It argues that Mary Ward’s Ignatian-inspired texts in particular represent a radical reimagining of the exemplary function of women’s lives. https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/14257life-writingwomen’s writingparatextsmanuscriptsWard (Mary)Fitzherbert (Dionys)
spellingShingle Martin Thompson
Early Modern Exemplars: Reading Strategies and the Assertion of Readerly Identity and Authority in the Life-writing of Mary Ward, Dionys Fitzherbert and Elizabeth Isham
Sillages Critiques
life-writing
women’s writing
paratexts
manuscripts
Ward (Mary)
Fitzherbert (Dionys)
title Early Modern Exemplars: Reading Strategies and the Assertion of Readerly Identity and Authority in the Life-writing of Mary Ward, Dionys Fitzherbert and Elizabeth Isham
title_full Early Modern Exemplars: Reading Strategies and the Assertion of Readerly Identity and Authority in the Life-writing of Mary Ward, Dionys Fitzherbert and Elizabeth Isham
title_fullStr Early Modern Exemplars: Reading Strategies and the Assertion of Readerly Identity and Authority in the Life-writing of Mary Ward, Dionys Fitzherbert and Elizabeth Isham
title_full_unstemmed Early Modern Exemplars: Reading Strategies and the Assertion of Readerly Identity and Authority in the Life-writing of Mary Ward, Dionys Fitzherbert and Elizabeth Isham
title_short Early Modern Exemplars: Reading Strategies and the Assertion of Readerly Identity and Authority in the Life-writing of Mary Ward, Dionys Fitzherbert and Elizabeth Isham
title_sort early modern exemplars reading strategies and the assertion of readerly identity and authority in the life writing of mary ward dionys fitzherbert and elizabeth isham
topic life-writing
women’s writing
paratexts
manuscripts
Ward (Mary)
Fitzherbert (Dionys)
url https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/14257
work_keys_str_mv AT martinthompson earlymodernexemplarsreadingstrategiesandtheassertionofreaderlyidentityandauthorityinthelifewritingofmarywarddionysfitzherbertandelizabethisham