ABSTRACT

The seventeenth century saw a dramatic increase in self-writing-from the private jotting down of personal thoughts in an irregular and spontaneous way, to the carefully considered composition of extended autobiographical narrative and deliberate self-fashioning for public consumption. Recent anthologies of women's writing, drawing to some extent on this rich but relatively little-known archive, have demonstrated the importance of studying such material to gain insight into female lives in that era. Personal Disclosures is innovative in that it stimulates and facilitates comparative analysis of female and male representations of the self, and of gendered constructions of identity and experience, by presenting a broad range of extracts from both women's and men's autobiographical writings. The majority of the extracts have been freshly edited from original seventeenth-century manuscripts and books. Exploiting all kinds of text-diaries, journals, logs, testimonies, memoirs, letters, autobiographies-the anthology also encourages consideration of topics central to current scholarly interest: religious experience, the body, communities, the family, encounters with new lands and peoples, and the conceptualization and writing of the self. A General Introduction discusses early modern autobiographical writing, and there are substantial introductions to each of the six sections, together with detailed suggestions for further reading.

chapter |20 pages

General Introduction

chapter |6 pages

Editorial Note

part |2 pages

Section 1 Marriage

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|3 pages

Maria Thynne: Letters to her Husband

chapter 3|5 pages

Simonds D'Ewes: Marriage Negotiations

chapter 10|3 pages

Anthony Walker: His Wife's Daily Routine

part |2 pages

Section 2 Parents and Children

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

chapter 8|3 pages

Roger North: His Upbringing

chapter 11|6 pages

Cotton Mather: On his Children

part |2 pages

Section 3 Beyond the Family

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|5 pages

Nehemiah Wallington: On Money Matters

chapter 2|3 pages

John Dane: Leaving Home

chapter 7|6 pages

Dorothy Osborne: Ending her Engagement

chapter 9|7 pages

Roger Lowe: Love and Friendship

part |2 pages

Section 4 States of Body, States of Mind

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|4 pages

Richard Kilby: His Chronic Illness

chapter 3|2 pages

Francis Knight: On Being a Galley Slave

chapter 11|4 pages

Alice Thornton: Experience of Childbirth

part |2 pages

Section 5 Religious Experience

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

chapter 8|4 pages

Mary Penington: Two Dreams of Christ

chapter 9|5 pages

Anna Trapnel: Imprisonment for her Faith

chapter 11|7 pages

George Trosse: An Account of his Madness

part |2 pages

Section 6 New Worlds

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

chapter 4|3 pages

Richard Frethorne: A Letter from Virginia

chapter 5|4 pages

Thomas James: An Ice-Bound Winter

chapter |4 pages

8T.S.: A Prisoner of the Turks

chapter 13|4 pages

Jonathan Dickinson: Castaways in Florida

chapter |6 pages

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