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“Caloipe,” “Mary Lovetruth,” and “A Female American”: Women Editorialists during the American Revolutionary Era 

Author: Betsy Verhoeven - Betsy L. Verhoeven is Mellon Lecturing Fellow in the Thompson Writing Program at Duke University, Box 90025, Durham, NC 27708-0025, USA. E-mail: betsy.verhoeven@duke.edua
Affiliation:   a Duke University, Durham, NC, USA
DOI: 10.1080/02773940802358802
Publication Frequency: 4 issues per year
Published in: journal Rhetoric Society Quarterly, Volume 39, Issue 1 December 2009 , pages 25 - 45
Formats available: HTML (English) : PDF (English)
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Abstract

Articles signed with female pseudonyms and contributed to the newspaper The Massachusetts Spy (1770-1775) demonstrate that female editorialists warranted their public-sphere participation with a wide variety of rhetorical methods. Choice of topic, degree of assent or dissent from male writers, and manipulation of tone, especially humor, assisted in women's public-sphere participation during the Revolutionary period when conventions regarding writerly authority were in flux. In turn, male rhetors used religious and medical warrants to control female public sphere participation. Although women's disagreement about overtly political issues was not tolerated, subtle declarations of patriotic behavior more obviously connected with feminine topics and behavior allowed women authors to write publicly when they aligned their contributions with republican notions of sympathy and concern for the common good. In the end, republicanism rendered women's bodies contested ground, both warranting their public-sphere participation and increasing surveillance over them.
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