Gifting Translation in Early Modern England
Title
Gifting Translation in Early Modern England
Subtitle
Women Writers and the Politics of Authorship
Price
€ 117,00 excl. VAT
ISBN
9789463721202
Format
Hardback
Number of pages
216
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Also available as
eBook PDF - € 116,99
Table of Contents
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List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction: ‘Transformance’: Renaissance Women’s Translation and the Performance of Gift Exchange
Chapter 1: ‘Thys my poore labor to present’: Mary Bassett’s Translation of Eusebius’s Ecclesiastical History
Chapter 2: ‘For the comodite of my countrie’: Nation, Gift, and Family in Lady Jane Lumley’s Tragedie of Iphigeneia
Chapter 3: ‘Graced both with my pen and pencell’: Prophecy and Politics in Jane Seager’s Divine Prophecies of the Ten Sibills
Chapter 4: ‘The fruits of my pen’: Esther Inglis’s Translation of Georgette de Montenay’s Emblemes ou Devises Chrestiennes
Conclusion: ‘Shall I Apologize Translation?’
Bibliography
Appendix 1: Table of Emblems and Dedicatees in Esther Inglis’s Cinquante Emblemes Chrestiens (1624)

Kirsten Inglis

Gifting Translation in Early Modern England

Women Writers and the Politics of Authorship

Translation was a critical mode of discourse for early modern writers. Gifting Translation in Early Modern England: Women Writers and the Politics of Authorship examines the intersection of translation and the culture of gift-giving in early modern England, arguing that this intersection allowed women to subvert dominant modes of discourse through acts of linguistic and inter-semiotic translation and conventions of gifting. The book considers four early modern translators: Mary Bassett, Jane Lumley, Jane Seager, and Esther Inglis. These women negotiate the rhetorics of translation and gift-culture in order to articulate political and religious affiliations and beliefs in their carefully crafted manuscript gift-books. This book offers a critical lens through which to read early modern translations in relation to the materiality of early modern gift culture.
Author

Kirsten Inglis

Kirsten Inglis teaches in the Department of English at the University of Calgary. She held a SSHRC postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Alberta’s Department of English and Film Studies. She has published essays on Shakespeare, adaptation and editing, and early modern manuscript drama. Her current research focuses on seventeenth-century women’s epistolary networks.