This section contains 3,956 words (approx. 14 pages at 300 words per page) |
Dictionary of Literary Biography on Mary Sidney
Mary Sidney was the most important non-royal woman writer and patron in Elizabethan England. Without appearing to transgress the strictures against women's writing, she composed a sizable body of work, evading criticism by focusing on religious themes and by confining her work to the genres thought appropriate to women--translation, dedication, elegy, and encomium. Even more important to her success was her identity as the sister of Sir Philip Sidney." She began her public literary career after his death by encouraging works written in his praise, publishing his works, and completing his translation of the Psalms. Except for some business correspondence, all of her extant works were completed or published in the 1590s. Tantalizing later references indicate that she continued writing and translating until her death, but all subsequent works have been lost, probably to fire: her primary residences of Wilton and Baynards Castle burned in the seventeenth century...
This section contains 3,956 words (approx. 14 pages at 300 words per page) |