El volumen Economic Imperatives for Women’s Writing in Early Modern Europe, editado por Carme Font Paz y Nina Geerdink y publicado en 2018, se encuentra ahora disponible con acceso libre en la página web de la editorial Brill. Los artículos que integran el libro profundizan, desde una perspectiva material, en la historia de la autoría y la producción literaria de las mujeres de la Primera Edad Moderna en Europa.
Como se puede apreciar en el índice, entre las contribuciones del volumen se encuentra un trabajo de la coordinadora de Bieses, Nieves Baranda, bajo el título «Words for Sale: Early Modern Spanish Women’s Literary Economy»:
Index
Acknowledgements
Notes on Contributors
- Introduction: Women, Professionalisation, and Patronage
Carme Font Paz and Nina Geerdink - Women Authors’ Reputation and Its Relationship to Money Earned: Some Early French Writers as Examples
Suzan van Dijk - Words for Sale: Early Modern Spanish Women’s Literary Economy
Nieves Baranda - Fighting for Her Profession: Dorothe Engelbretsdatter’s Discourse of Self-Defence
Marie Nedregotten Sørbø - Writing for Patronage or Patronage for Writing? Two Case Studies in Seventeenth-Century and Post-Restoration Women’s Poetry in Britain
Carme Font Paz - Possibilities of Patronage: The Dutch Poet Elisabeth Hoofman and Her German Patrons
Nina Geerdink - Between Patronage and Professional Writing. The Situation of Eighteenth Century Women of Letters in Venice: The Example of Luisa Bergalli Gozzi
Rotraud von Kulessa - From Queen’s Librarian to Voice of the Neapolitan Republic: Eleonora de Fonseca Pimentel
Irene Zanini-Cordi - “[S]ome employment in the translating Way”: Economic Imperatives in Charlotte Lennox’s Career as a Translator
Marianna D’Ezio - Beating the Odds: Sophie Albrecht (1756–1840), a Successful Woman Writer and Publisher in Eighteenth-Century Germany
Berit C.R. Royer