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Language Arts & Disciplines Rhetoric

The Eloquence of Mary Astell

by (author) Christine M. Sutherland

Publisher
University of Calgary Press
Initial publish date
Jan 2006
Category
Rhetoric
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781552381533
    Publish Date
    Jan 2006
    List Price
    $44.95
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781552384596
    Publish Date
    Jan 2006
    List Price
    $44.95

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Description

 

The Eloquence of Mary Astell makes an important contribution to the knowledge and understanding of the important role that women, and one woman in particular, played in the history of rhetoric.

Mary Astell (1666-1731) was an unusually perceptive thinker and writer during the time of the Enlightenment. Here, author Christine Sutherland explores her importance as a rhetorician, an area that has, until recently, received little attention. Astell was widely known and respected during her own time, but her influence and reputation receded in the years after her death. Her importance as an Enlightenment thinker is becoming more and more recognized, however. As a skilled theorist and practitioner of rhetoric, Astell wrote extensively on education, philosophy, politics, religion, and the status of women. She showed that it was possible for a woman to move from the semi-private form of rhetoric represented by conversation and letters into full public participation in philosophical and political debate.

 

About the author

Christine Mason Sutherland is Associate Professor in the Faculty of Communication and Culture at the University of Calgary, where she teaches the history of rhetoric and other courses in Communications. She has published on the rhetoric of Augustine of Hippo and on scientific rhetoric in the seventeenth century. In recent years, her research has been in the relationship of seventeenth century women to the rhetorical tradition. She has published many essays on Margaret Cavendish and Mary Astell.

Christine M. Sutherland's profile page

Editorial Reviews

 

Spare and elegant . . . With admirable dexterity and economy, Sutherland sets out women's loss of ideological status in the Reformation and Renaissance.

—Regina Janes, University of Toronto Quarterly