2000
DOI: 10.1353/jowh.2000.0049
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Epistolary Passions: Friendship and the Literary Public of Constance de Salm, 1767-1845

Abstract: The epistolary friendships of Constance de Salm--a feminist and femme philosophe (woman philosopher) prominent in her own time but virtually forgotten today--provide a counterpoint to feminist scholarship that has tended to idealize relationships among women. Salm's little-known, unpublished correspondence from the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries reveals that competition and political expediency excluded from her circle those female intellectuals most like herself. Her closest relationships with women… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…43 Salm's self-identification with Sappho was reinforced by her friends, who referred to her admiringly as 'Sappho'. 44 In 1798, in her first letter to Salm, Sophie de Salis, one of Salm's earliest literary protegees, wrote:…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…43 Salm's self-identification with Sappho was reinforced by her friends, who referred to her admiringly as 'Sappho'. 44 In 1798, in her first letter to Salm, Sophie de Salis, one of Salm's earliest literary protegees, wrote:…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%