University of Delaware Press
The University of Delaware Press publishes approximately 15–20 books per year in Literary Studies, especially Renaissance and Early Modern literature; Eighteenth-Century Studies; French literature and culture; Art History and Material Culture Studies; and cultural studies of Delaware and the Eastern Shore. 
Showing 1-12 of 124 items.

Unsettling Sexuality

Queer Horizons in the Long Eighteenth Century

University of Delaware Press

Unsettling Sexuality brings queer, trans, and asexual lenses to bear on the long eighteenth century. Drawing from Middle-Eastern and Asian studies, African American studies, and Native American and Indigenous studies, the authors pioneer intersectional readings of European, transatlantic, and global eighteenth-century archives that unsettle traditional ways of approaching the field, to welcome sexuality as something that can resist rigidity.
 

  • Copyright year: 2025
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Unsettling Sexuality

Queer Horizons in the Long Eighteenth Century

University of Delaware Press

Unsettling Sexuality brings queer, trans, and asexual lenses to bear on the long eighteenth century. Drawing from Middle-Eastern and Asian studies, African American studies, and Native American and Indigenous studies, the authors pioneer intersectional readings of European, transatlantic, and global eighteenth-century archives that unsettle traditional ways of approaching the field, to welcome sexuality as something that can resist rigidity.
 

  • Copyright year: 2025
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The Age of Subtlety

Nature and Rhetorical Conceits in Early Modern Europe

University of Delaware Press

The Age of Subtlety is the first book-length study to examine the seventeenth-century craze for rhetorical conceits in connection with scientific and technological debates. Focusing on Italy and Spain, it argues that these intricate and challenging metaphors became embodiments of a competition between natural and human ingenuity, as well as sites to reflect on the consequences of telescopic and microscopic vision, the boundaries between natural and artificial, and the generation of life. 

  • Copyright year: 2024
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Honest John Williams

U.S. Senator from Delaware

University of Delaware Press

Honest John Williams, written by noted Delaware historian Carol E. Hoffecker, examines the early life and political career of John J. Williams (1904-88), who served four terms as a U.S. senator between 1947 and 1970, and became an important advocate for fiscal probity and governmental integrity in the mid-twentieth century.

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Feminist Comedy

Women Playwrights of London

University of Delaware Press

Feminist Comedy argues that the development of modern feminist thought is closely linked to theatrical comedy. Through analysis of plays by Catherine Clive, Frances Brooke, Frances Burney, Hannah Cowley, and Elizabeth Inchbald, the book demonstrates that these authors turned to comedy as a site of feminist critique, practice, and experimentation.
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  • Copyright year: 2024
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Redreaming the Renaissance

Essays on History and Literature in Honor of Guido Ruggiero

University of Delaware Press

Redreaming the Renaissance offers twelve essays that build on the pathbreaking work of Guido Ruggiero in blending history and literature. Within this volume, contributors take interdisciplinary approaches to examining not only belles lettres but also other forms of artful expression, bringing their fields into conversation and reflecting on the methodology needed to sustain and enrich this conversation. 
 

  • Copyright year: 2024
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Objects of Liberty

British Women Writers and Revolutionary Souvenirs

University of Delaware Press

Objects of Liberty explores the prevalence of souvenirs in six British women’s travel accounts of the French Revolution and Napoleonic era. Using a methodology informed by literary, gender, and material culture studies, it argues that women writers employed the souvenir to circulate political ideas and contribute to conversations about individual and national identity.

  • Copyright year: 2024
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A Genealogy of the Gentleman

Women Writers and Masculinity in the Eighteenth Century

University of Delaware Press

A Genealogy of the Gentleman argues that eighteenth-century women writers made key interventions in modern ideals of masculinity and authorship through narrative constructions of the gentleman in courtship novels. This codification of the gentleman allowed women authors to carve out a space for their literary authority not by overtly opposing their male critics and society’s patriarchal structure, but by rewriting the persona of the gentleman as a figure whose very desirability and hegemonic power were dependent on women’s influence.
 

  • Copyright year: 2024
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Complete Writings and Selected Correspondence of John Dickinson

Volume 3

Edited by Jane E. Calvert
University of Delaware Press

From 1764 through 1766, John Dickinson’s writings reveal how he became a leading figure in the Pennsylvania Assembly and in the growing American resistance to unjust British taxation. Seeking protection of fundamental rights, he opposed Benjamin Franklin’s plan to abolish liberty of conscience in Pennsylvania, served as the lead draftsman in the Stamp Act Congress, and offered the American public the first practical advice on resisting British oppression.

  • Copyright year: 2024
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The Theatre Couple in Early Modern Italy

Self-Fashioning and Mutual Marketing

University of Delaware Press

The Theatre Couple in Early Modern Italy examines the mechanisms involved in forging a successful joint theatre career, with a focus on the artistic path of two professional performers: Giovan Battista Andreini (1576-1654) and Virginia Ramponi (1583-ca.1631). It links their self-fashioning and marketing strategies to the context of post-Tridentine Italy but outlines the couple paradigm beyond that historical context.

  • Copyright year: 2024
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Fictions of Pleasure

The Putain Memoirs of Prerevolutionary France

University of Delaware Press

This book identifies the prostitute memoir as a subgenre of the eighteenth-century French libertine novel and explores how the fictional utopia the narrators of these salacious pseudo-memoirs undermine the patriarchal hierarchies of the Ancien Régime and propose a social model in which women form networks of mutual support to achieve wealth and personal satisfaction.

  • Copyright year: 2024
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Writing through Boyhood in the Long Eighteenth Century

Age, Gender, and Work

University of Delaware Press

Looking at privileged boys in school as well as those of the laboring class, criminal boys who ended up in prison, and apprentices in the printing press whose labor helped them achieve respectable manhood, this book argues that boys in the long eighteenth century constituted a particular kind of currency, both valuable and expendable—valuable because of gender, expendable because of youth. As such, boys were all, one way or another, made useful, and their stories run the gamut from trivial to tragic. 

  • Copyright year: 2024
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