Lex

Browse

GenresShelvesPremiumBlog

Company

AboutJobsPartnersSell on LexAffiliates

Resources

DocsInvite FriendsFAQ

Legal

Terms of ServicePrivacy Policygeneral@lex-books.com(215) 703-8277

© 2026 LexBooks, Inc. All rights reserved.

Women peasant poets in eighteenth-century England, Scotland, and GermanyWomen peasant poets in eighteenth-century England, Scotland, and Germany

Women peasant poets in eighteenth-century England, Scotland, and Germany

Susanne Kord

About this book

"This is the first comparative study of a highly unlikely group of authors: eighteenth-century women peasants in England, Scotland, and Germany, women who, as a rule, received little or no formal education and lived by manual labor, many of them in dire poverty. Among them are the English washerwoman Mary Collier, the English domestic servants Elizabeth Hands and Molly Leapor, the German cowherd Anna Louisa Karsch, the Scottish diarywoman Janet Little, the Scottish domestic servant Christian Milne, and the English milkmaid Ann Cromartie Yearsley. Their literature is here linked with one of the major eighteenth-century aesthetic trends in all three countries, the Natural Genius craze, which culminated in highland primitivism in Scotland and England, and in the Sturm und Drang in Germany."--BOOK JACKET.

Details

OL Work ID
OL16943640W

Subjects

Peasants as authorsWomen authorsWomen and literatureEuropean poetryHistory and criticismHistoryPoetry, history and criticismPeasants

Find this book

Open Library
Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.