Situating Women’s Private Practices of Knowledge Production in the Early Modern Context
References
Lady Jane Lumley’s Private Education and Its Political Resonances
Introduction: Education at a Noble Household
The Private, the Public, and the Political in Lady Lumley’s Writings
Lady Lumley’s The Tragedie of Euripides Called Iphigeneia
Comparing Translations of Iphigenia at Aulis
In Conclusion
References
Camilla Herculiana (Erculiani): Private Practices of Knowledge Production
Herculiana’s Private Life and Connections: Biographical and Contextual Framework
Camilla Herculiana é Gregetta, Lettere di philosophia naturale (1584)
Inquisitional Trial
Conclusion
References
From Behind the Folding Screen to the Collège de France: Victorine de Chastenay’s Privacy Dynamics for Knowledge in the Making
Note-Taking and Knowledge Acquisition as Private Practices
Adapting the Household’s Privacy to Reconcile Writing and Social Obligations
Privacy in Institutional Spaces
Conclusion
References
“Fait à mes heures de loisir”: Women’s Private Libraries as Spaces of Learning and Knowledge Production
The Ducal Libraries: Private Collections?
Elisabeth Sophie Marie and Philippine Charlotte of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel The Duchesses’ Book Use and Knowledge Production
Private Knowledge Spaces: Concluding Remarks
References
Contingent Privacies: Knowledge Production and Gender Expectations from 1500 to 1800
Women’s Knowledges and Publicizing the Private
Knowledge Production at Home
Women, Knowledge, and Their Bodies
References.