1
Gournay MLJ de. The apology for the woman writing. Apology for the woman writing and other works. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2002:107–54.
2
Gournay MLJ de. The ladies’ complaint. Apology for the woman writing and other works. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2002:97–105.
3
Agrippa von Nettesheim HC, Rabil A. Declamation on the nobility and preeminence of the female sex. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1996.
4
Wiesner-Hanks ME. Literacy and learning. Women and gender in early modern Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2008:141–73.
5
Suchon G. On the celibate life freely chosen. A woman who defends all the persons of her sex: selected philosophical and moral writings. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2010:229–93.
6
Vives JL. Which writers are to be read and which not to be read. The education of a Christian woman: a sixteenth-century manual. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2000:73–9.
7
Scudéry M de, Newman K. The story of Sapho. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2003.
8
Scudéry M de, Newman K. The story of Sapho. Chicago, [Ill.]: University of Chicago Press 2003.
9
Vives JL, Fantazzi C. The education of a Christian woman: a sixteenth-century manual. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2000.
10
Agrippa von Nettesheim HC, Rabil A. Declamation on the nobility and preeminence of the female sex. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1996.
11
Boccaccio G, Brown V. Famous women. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press 2001.
12
Ferguson MW, Quilligan M, Vickers NJ. Rewriting the Renaissance: the discourses of sexual difference in early modern Europe. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1986.
13
Laqueur TW. Making sex: body and gender from the Greeks to Freud. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press 1990.
14
Davis NZ, Farge A. A history of women in the West: 3: Renaissance and Enlightenment paradoxes. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 1993.
15
Wiesner ME. Women and gender in early modern Europe. 3rd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2008.
16
Kelly J. Early Feminist Theory and the ‘Querelle des Femmes’, 1400-1789. Signs. 1982;8:4–28.
17
Broad J, Green K. A history of women’s political thought in Europe, 1400-1700. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2009.
18
Fonte M, Cox V. The worth of women: wherein is clearly revealed their nobility and their superiority to men. Chicago, Ill: University of Chicago Press 1997.
19
Marinella L, Dunhill A. The nobility and excellence of women, and the defects and vices of men. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1999.
20
Bouwsma WJ. Venice and the defense of republican liberty: Renaissance values in the age of the Counter Reformation. Berkeley: University of California Press 1968.
21
Cox V. The Renaissance dialogue: literary dialogue in its social and political contexts, Castiglione to Galileo. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1992.
22
Virginia Cox. The Single Self: Feminist Thought and the Marriage Market in Early Modern Venice. Renaissance Quarterly. 1995;48:513–81.
23
Cox V. Women’s writing in Italy, 1400-1650. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press 2008.
24
Labalme P. Women’s Roles in Early Modern Venice: An Exceptional Case. In: Labalme PH, ed. Beyond their sex: learned women of the European past. New York: New York University Press 1980:129–52.
25
Rosenthal MF. Venetian women and their discontents. Sexuality and gender in early modern Europe: institutions, texts, images. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1993:197–232.
26
Paola Malpezzi Price. A Woman’s Discourse in the Italian Renaissance: Moderata Fonte’s ‘Il merito delle donne’. Annali d’Italianistica. 1989;7:165–81.
27
Kolsky SD. Wells of Knowledge: Moderata Fonte’s. The Italianist. 1993;13:57–96. doi: 10.1179/ita.1993.13.1.57
28
Jordan C. Renaissance feminism: literary texts and political models. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press 1990.
29
Chojnacka M. Working women of early modern Venice. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press 2001.
30
Hacke D. Women, sex, and marriage in early modern Venice. Aldershot: Ashgate 2004.
31
Ferraro JM. Marriage wars in late Renaissance Venice. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2001.
32
Migiel M, Schiesari J. Refiguring woman: perspectives on gender and the Italian Renaissance. Ithaca, N.Y: Cornell University Press 1991.
33
Malpezzi Price P, Ristaino C. Lucrezia Marinella and the ‘querelle des femmes’ in seventeenth-century Italy. Madison: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press 2008.
34
Schurman AM van, Irwin JL, Voet G. Whether a Christian woman should be educated and other writings from her intellectual circle. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1998.
35
Joyce Irwin. Anna Maria Van Schurman: From Feminism to Pietism. Church History. 1977;46:48–62.
36
Anne R. Larsen. A Women’s Republic of Letters: Anna Maria van Schurman, Marie de Gournay, and Female Self-Representation in Relation to the Public Sphere. Early Modern Women. 2008;3:105–26.
37
Larsen AR. The French Reception of Anna Maria van Schurman’s Letters on Women’s Education. Women’s letters across Europe, 1400-1700: form and persuasion. Aldershot: Ashgate 2005:297–314.
38
Norbrook D. Autonomy and the Republic of Letters: Michèle Le Dœuff, Anna Maria van Schurman, and the History of Women Intellectuals. Australian Journal of French Studies. 2003;40:275–87. doi: 10.3828/AJFS.40.3.275
39
van Beek P. One tongue is enough for a woman: The correspondence in Greek between Anna Maria van Schurman (1607-1678) and Bathsua Makin (1600-167?). Dutch Crossing. 1995;19:24–48.
40
Gournay MLJ de, Hillman R, Quesnel C. Apology for the woman writing and other works. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2002.
41
Cholakian PF. Women and the politics of self-representation in seventeenth-century France. Newark: University of Delaware Press 2000.
42
Regosin R. Montaigne’s Dutiful Daughter. Montaigne Studies. 1991;3:103–27.
43
Tetel (ed.) M. Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies. 1995;25.
44
Stanton DC. Autogynography: The Case of Marie de Gournay’s Apologie pour celle qui escrit. Autobiography in French literature. Columbia: University of South Carolina 1985:18–31.
45
Nelson S, Mazarin HM, Mancini M. Memoirs: Hortense Mancini and Marie Mancini. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2008.
46
Goldsmith EC, Goodman D. Going public: women and publishing in early modern France. Ithaca: Cornell University Press 1995.
47
Goldsmith EC. Publishing women’s life stories in France, 1647-1720: from voice to print. Aldershot: Ashgate 2001.
48
Beasley FE. Revising memory: women’s fiction and memoirs in seventeenth-century France. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press 1990.
49
STEVENSON J. Women and the Cultural Politics of Printing. The Seventeenth Century. 2009;24:205–37. doi: 10.1080/0268117X.2009.10555628
50
Bromilow P. Voicing early modern French women in translation: recent publications from the University of Chicago Press. Journal of European Studies. 2006;36:327–35. doi: 10.1177/0047244106064913
51
Rabb MA. The Work of Women in the Age of Electronic Reproduction: The Canon, Early Modern Women Writers and the Postmodern Reader. A companion to early modern women’s writing. Oxford, UK: Blackwell 2002:337–60.
52
Montpensier A-M-L d’Orléans, Motteville F de, DeJean JE. Against marriage: the correspondence of la Grande Mademoiselle. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2002.
53
Suchon G. On the Celibate Life Freely Chosen. A woman who defends all the persons of her sex: selected philosophical and moral writings. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2010:229–93.
54
Sarah Hanley. Engendering the State: Family Formation and State Building in Early Modern France. French Historical Studies. 1989;16:4–27.
55
Froide AM. Never married: singlewomen in early modern England. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2005.
56
Traub V. The renaissance of lesbianism in early modern England. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2002.
57
Le Dœuff M. The sex of knowing. New York: Routledge 2003.
58
Desnain V. Gabrielle Suchon’s Neutralistes. Relations & relationships in seventeenth-century French literature: actes du 36e congrès annuel de la North American Society for Seventeenth-Century French Literature, Portland State University, 6-8 mai 2004. Tübingen: Gunter Narr 2006:116–31.
59
Desnain V. The Origins of la vie Neutre: Nicolas Caussin’s Influence on the Writings of Gabrielle Suchon. French Studies. 2009;63:148–60. doi: 10.1093/fs/knp042
60
Le Doeuff M. Women in dialogue and in solitude. The Journal of Romance Studies. 2005;5:1–15. doi: 10.3167/147335305780960360
61
Schutte AJ. Gabrielle Suchon’s Leaving the Convent. Australian Journal of French Studies. 2010;47:304–6. doi: 10.3828/AJFS.47.3.304
62
Shapiro L, Descartes R, Elisabeth. The correspondence between Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia and René Descartes. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2007.
63
Poulain de La Barre F, Maistre Welch M, Bosley VE. Three Cartesian feminist treatises. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2002.
64
Harth E. Cartesian women: versions and subversions of rational discourse in the old regime. Ithaca: Cornell University Press 1992.
65
Wilkin RM. Women, imagination and the search for truth in early modern France. Aldershot: Ashgate 2008.
66
James S. Passion and action: the emotions in seventeenth-century philosophy. Oxford: Oxford University Press 1997.
67
Moriarty M. Early modern French thought: the age of suspicion. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2003.
68
Broad J. Women philosophers of the seventeenth century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2002.
69
Bordo S. Feminist interpretations of René Descartes. University Park, Pa: Pennsylvania State University Press 1999.
70
Lloyd G. The man of reason: ’male’and ’female’in western philosophy. 2nd ed. London: Routledge 1993.
71
Scudéry M de, Newman K. The story of Sapho. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2003.
72
Scudéry M de, Newman K. The story of Sapho. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2003.
73
Le Moyne P, Winchester JP. The gallery of heroick women. London: Printed by R. Norton for Henry Seile 1652.
74
Gilles Ménage. The history of women philosophers. Lanham, MD: University Press of America 1984.
75
DeJean JE. Tender geographies: women and the origins of the novel in France. New York: Columbia University Press 1991.
76
DeJean JE. Fictions of Sappho, 1546-1937. Chicago, [Ill.]: University of Chicago Press 1989.
77
Andreadis H. Sappho in early modern England: female same-sex literary erotics, 1550-1714. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2001.
78
Scudéry M de, Donawerth J, Strongson J. Selected letters, orations, and rhetorical dialogues. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2004.
79
Goldsmith EC. Exclusive conversations: the art of interaction in seventeenth-century France. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press 1988.
80
Maclean I. Woman triumphant: feminism in French literature, 1610-1652. London: Oxford University Press 1977.
81
Beasley FE. Salons, history, and the creation of seventeenth-century France: mastering memory. Aldershot: Ashgate 2006.
82
Lougee CC. Le Paradis des femmes: women, salons, and social stratification in seventeenth-century France. Princeton: Princeton University Press 1976.
83
Seifert LC. Manning the margins: masculinity and writing in seventeenth-century France. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press 2009.