Possibilities of Patronage: The Dutch Poet Elisabeth Hoofman and Her German Patrons
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Publication date
2018
Editors
Font Paz, Carme
Geerdink, Nina
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Part of book
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Abstract
Patronage was a common practice for many early modern authors, but it was a public activity involving engagement with politics, politicians and the rich and famous, and we know of relatively few women writers who profited from the benefits of patronage. The system of patronage altered, however, during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and one particular case study brings to light some of the possibilities and difficulties of this system for women writers. Elisabeth Hoofman (1664–1736) was a Dutch poet whose authorship was representative of that of many writing women around 1700: born in a rich family, she wrote poetry in order to establish and consolidate contacts in a wealthy circle of friends and family, refusing to publish any of her poems. Her authorship status seems to have changed, though, after she and her husband lost their fortune and turned to rich patrons to secure their living. The circle of people addressed in her poetry broadened to powerful men from outside of her intimate network and she started to print-publish. In this chapter, Hoofman’s opportunities to contribute to the family income as a woman writer along with her ability and necessity to manage her reputation are analysed with and through her poetry.
Keywords
Patronage, Women's Writing, Authorship, Taverne
Citation
Geerdink, N 2018, Possibilities of Patronage: The Dutch Poet Elisabeth Hoofman and Her German Patrons. in C Font Paz & N Geerdink (eds), Economic Imperatives for Women's Writing in Early Modern Europe. Women Writers in History , vol. 2, Brill | Rodopi, Leiden/Boston, pp. 124-146. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004383029_007