Abstract

Abstract Popular eighteenth-century British biographies of Cicero had a significant impact on the rhetorical identity formation of Elizabeth Montagu (1720–1800). As the acknowledged founder of the “Bluestocking” salon, Elizabeth Montagu played a key role in forming the conversational and epistolary eloquence of her broad and influential network of men and women. A careful analysis of the young Elizabeth's epistolary discussion of biographies of Cicero and Atticus, especially Conyers Middleton's Life of Cicero, provides insight into Montagu's mature rhetorical practice as well as neo-Ciceronian influences on men's and women's rhetorical identity formation in eighteenth-century Britain.

Journal
Rhetorica
Published
2008-05-01
DOI
10.1525/rh.2008.26.2.165
CompPile
Open Access
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References (15)

  1. 10.2307/463425
  2. Smith College Studies in Modern Languages
  3. Studies in Eighteenth-Century Literature
  4. 10.2307/366395
  5. 10.2307/2739187
Show all 15 →
  1. Life of Cicero
  2. Letters
  3. Elizabeth Montagu
  4. Letters
  5. Letters
  6. Letters
  7. Letters
  8. Letters
  9. Letters
  10. Letters