Book Description
This collection of essays shows how letters nimbly traverse the boundaries between the public and the private and examines the many roles of correspondence, from the domestic to the global. Contributors discuss a variety of engrossing subjects: documents of early exploration and diplomacy, including Columbus's texts and Amerigo Vespucci's reports of his experiences in America; the surprisingly large role that letters played in the success of the Jesuit order in the seventeenth century; English letter-writing manuals that provide model letters to be imitated while offering a vivid view into a cross section of lived experience; epistolary travel writings; and letter-writing instruction in nineteenth-century America, among other topics.
About the Author
Linda C. Mitchell teaches English at San Jose State University and is the author of Grammar Wars: Language as Cultural Battlefield in 17th and 18th Century England. Susan Green is the editor of the Huntington Library Quarterly.
Studies in the Cultural History of Letter Writing FROM THE PUBLISHER
The Huntington is one of America's premier cultural, research, and educational centers, with holdings that are among the most treasured artifacts of Western civilization. The Huntington Library: Treasures from Ten Centuries opens the doors of what is known as a scholar's paradise, exploring the value of these holdings in history and for the present.