Category:Women Authorship--1800s
Women Authorship (1800s) -- History of research -- Overview In 1812 Hannah Adams offered her more important contribution to studies in ancient Judaism with an History of the Jews, after the destruction of the Temple. Women began to be more actively and more commonly involved in publishing as authors of fictional or semi-fictional works of ancient history. Susanna Moodie and Chistian Isobel Johnstone in Scotland, Harriet Martineau and Annie Molyneux Peploe in England, Sarah Pogson Smith in the United States, and Delphine de Girardin in France were among the most significant representatives of their generation. Great popularity had also the visionary accounts of Anne Catherine Emmerich who like Maria de Agreda before her, focused on the lives of Jesus and Mary of Nazareth. @2015 Gabriele Boccaccini, University of Michigan
Women Authorship (1800s) -- Highlights
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Pages in category "Women Authorship--1800s"
The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total.
1
- The History of the Jews from the Destruction of Jerusalem to the Nineteenth Century (1812 Adams), book
- Spartacus (1822 Moodie), juvenile novel
- The Wars of the Jews (1823 Johnstone / Brooke), juvenile novel & art
- Traditions of Palestine (1830 Martineau), novel
- Das bittere Leiden unseres Herrn Jesu Christi (1833 Emmerich, Brentano), vision
- Zerah, the Believing Jew (1837 Smith), novel
- Judith (1843 Girardin), play
Media in category "Women Authorship--1800s"
The following 2 files are in this category, out of 2 total.
- 1840 * Peploe (novel).jpg 375 × 499; 25 KB
- 1845 * Aguilar.jpg 324 × 499; 25 KB