List of Illustrations List of Tables Introduction: Gender, Literary Networks, and Media Cultures in the Eighteenth Century Leith Davis, Michelle Levy, and Diana Solomon Part I: Print Histories Chapter 1: The Printer?s Mark: Finding Anne Maxwell and London Printers? Networks Margaret J.M. Ezell Chapter 2: Complicating Narratives of National Superiority: The Lady?s Magazine; or Polite Companion (1759?1767) Susan Carlile Chapter 3: What Periodicals Do To (And For) Literary History: Lessons from the Lady?s Magazine (1770?1832) Jennie Batchelor Chapter 4: The Waldie Sisters and their Publishers: Building a Literary Career in Early Nineteenth-Century Britain Pam Perkins Chapter 5: Annotated Catalogs and Remote Participation: Restoring Women to the Auction Bénédicte Miyamoto Part II: Manuscript Cultures Chapter 6: Sociability, Collaboration, Collecting: A Case Study (Harrowby Manuscript 81) Isobel Grundy Chapter 7: The Domestic Economy of a Poem Book Alexis Chema Chapter 8: ?Scratch it out?: Retrospective Editing in the Manuscript Verse Miscellany Angela Wachowich Chapter 9: Mary Tooth and Methodist Women?s Manuscript Sermons Andrew O. Winckles Chapter 10: ?Fugitive Sightings?: Making Women Visible in ?The Lyon in Mourning? Manuscript Project Leith Davis Part III: Rethinking Women?s Book History Chapter 11: Making Meaning Through Gender, Materiality, and Ownership: ?A Catalogue of a Young Country Ladies [ sic ] Library? (1712) Melanie Bigold Chapter 12: Female Readers at the Bristol Library Society, 1772?1800 Norbert Schürer Chapter 13: Women Readers in the British Museum Michelle Levy Chapter 14: Canada?s First Women Writers Carole Gerson Chapter 15: Ethics of Care in the Ballitore Project Rachael Scarborough King, Shaun Nowicki, Jana Ross, Tomas Gonzalez, Audrey Rodriguez, and Yvette de la Vega Chapter 16: A Modern Dialogue of the Dead Elizabeth Eger Afterword: More Modern Dialoguing with the Dead Betty A. Schellenberg Acknowledgements Bibliography Notes on Contributors Index.
Women's Literary Networks and Media Cultures in the Long Eighteenth Century