Interacting with Print Graduate Seminar
The Interacting with Print Research Group Presents
Reading and Writing:聽 How Young French Women interacted with Print in the Eighteenth Century
A Seminar with Prof. Dena Goodman (University of Michigan)
Friday, November 20, 2009
10:00am 鈥撀12:00pm
Please join us for coffee at 9:30am
9I制作厂免费, Arts Council Room
Arts Building, Room 160
Preparatory Readings Available Online at
Kindly RSVP to interactingwithprint [at] mcgill.ca
Is reading a matter of passive absorption or active engagement?聽 If the Enlightenment is thought to have taught readers to read actively and critically, the novel is (and was) often represented as absorbing its readers as it suspends their critical faculties.聽 And the novel is (and was) understood to be a particularly female genre.聽 So, following this logic, we would expect the reading practice of women in the eighteenth century, and especially of young women, to be passive and absorbtive, rather than active, engaged, and critical.聽 This is certainly the impression we get from visual representations of eighteenth-century women engaged with print, or with writing of any sort.聽 It is why reading was considered dangerous for young women; because they did not read critically and were easily absorbed in what they read, what they read had to be tightly controlled.
What about writing?聽 Is it active or passive?聽 We tend to think of writing as active and creative, and writing that is not active as mere rote copying or formulaic exercises 鈥撀爊ot really writing at all.聽 This is often how letter writing and particularly the letters of elite women are characterized:聽 as formal exercises in politeness without originality or, indeed, sincerity.
In this seminar we will test these assumptions about reading,
writing, and gender by examining the letters and writing practice
of elite young French women in the eighteenth century as they
engaged with printed texts.聽
Prof. Dena Goodman is Lila Miller Collegiate
Professor of History and Women's Studies and co-director of 鈥淭he
Encyclopedia of Diderot and D鈥橝lembert Collaborative Translation
Project,鈥 (), a digital library
project housed at the University of Michigan. Her latest book,
Becoming a Woman in the Age of Letters explores the lives of women
and the meaning of gender in eighteenth-century France through the
lens of letter writing as a cultural practice. It was published by
Cornell University Press in 2009. Earlier work explored
Enlightenment political thought and the role of Parisian
salonni猫res in shaping the intellectual sociability of the
Enlightenment. She has edited collective volumes on a variety of
topics: the contributions of women writers to the shaping of the
public sphere, Marie-Antoinette, and the cultural meanings of
furniture in the eighteenth-century Atlantic world.聽