Includes bibliographical references (pages 353-379) and index.
Contents:
Introduction: Catherine the Great, letter-writing and the elite Enlightenment -- Chapter 1: Catherine the epistolerian -- Chapter 2: Catherine the Great and eighteenth-century epistolary style -- Chapter 3: Fashioning the great Enlightenment monarch -- Chapter 4: The play of authority in epistolary form -- Chapter 5: Epistolary publicity and the audience for Catherine's correspondences -- Chapter 6: Greatness contested: Catherine's epistolary response to the French Revolution --Conclusion: New readers and new ways of reading Catherine's letters.
Summary:
The Epistolary Art of Catherine the Great is the first study to analyse comprehensively the letters of Empress Catherine the Great of Russia (reigned 1762-1796) and to argue that they constitute a masterpiece of eighteenth-century epistolary writing. Kelsey Rubin-Detlev traces Catherine's development as a letter-writer, her networking strategies, and her image-making, demonstrating the centrality of ideas, literary experimentation, and manipulation of material form evident in Catherine's epistolary practice. Through this, Rubin-Detlev illustrates how Catherine's letters reveal her full engagement with the Enlightenment and further show how creatively she absorbed and responded to the ideas of her century. The letter was not merely a means by which the empress promoted Russia and its leader as European powers; it was a literary genre through which Catherine expressed her identity as a member of the social, political, and intellectual elite of her century.
Series:
Oxford University studies in the Enlightenment, 0435-2866 ; 2019:08
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.