2022
DOI: 10.21039/rsj.354
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Zones of Privacy in Letters Between Women of Power: Elizabeth I of England and Anna of Saxony

Abstract: The present article explores how women of power engaged in diplomatic efforts via forms of epistolary privacy by analysing private letters between Elizabeth I and Anna of Saxony in the late 1570s and early 1580s. Through a close examination of how their exchanges moved from very public matters to more personal requests, the authors show how early modern notions of privacy offered strategic communication prompts that could be used effectively by women in political negotiations. The intersection between these zo… Show more

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“…Women-especially members of the nobility 23 -were part of knowledge networks and even created their own, exchanging knowledge they considered the most relevant for their experience in the early modern world. 24 As such, we are less concerned about what kind of knowledge women produced but how they went about their processes of knowledge creation and how privacy factored into their practices. We notice that what stands out about early modern women's knowledge production is not that they are on different subjects than men's, or the implied value of their knowledge.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Women-especially members of the nobility 23 -were part of knowledge networks and even created their own, exchanging knowledge they considered the most relevant for their experience in the early modern world. 24 As such, we are less concerned about what kind of knowledge women produced but how they went about their processes of knowledge creation and how privacy factored into their practices. We notice that what stands out about early modern women's knowledge production is not that they are on different subjects than men's, or the implied value of their knowledge.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%