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         Behn Aphra:     more books (100)
  1. Aphra Behn by Adelaide P. Amore, 1987-07-30
  2. Aphra Behn und ihre Londoner Komodien: Die Dramatikerin und ihr Werk im England des ausgehenden 17. Jahrhunderts (Heidelberger Forschungen) (German Edition) by Cathrin Brockhaus, 1998
  3. The novels of Mrs. Aphra Behn; by Aphra Behn, 2010-08-25
  4. The Works of Aphra Behn, Vol. III by Aphra Behn, 2009-06-06
  5. Aphra Behn, the incomparable Astrea, (Representative women) by V Sackville-West, 1928
  6. Aphra Behn (New Casebooks)
  7. The Ravishing Restoration: Aphra Behn, Violence, and Comedy by Ann Marie Stewart, 2010-04
  8. Four Restoration Playwrights: A Reference Guide to Thomas Shadwell, Aphra Behn, Nathaniel Lee and Thomas Otway (Reference Publication in Literature) by J. M. Armistead, 1984-08
  9. The Works of Aphra Behn, Vol. I (of 6) by Aphra Behn, 2010-03-29
  10. The Works Of Aphra Behn. Edited By Montague Summers. Vol II
  11. The Poems of Aphra Behn: A Selection (N Y U Press Women's Classics)
  12. Shakespeare, Aphra Behn and the Canon (Approaching Literature) by Lizbeth Goodman, W.R. Owens, 1996-09-17
  13. Aphra Behn (Writers & Their Work Series) by S. J. Wiseman, 1996-09
  14. The Plays, Histories And Novels Of The Ingenious Mrs. Aphra Behn With Life And Memoirs V2 by Aphra Behn, 2007-07-25

61. Project Gutenberg - Author Index: B
behn, aphra. LoveLetters Between a Nobleman and His Sister; The Works of aphra behn, Vol. II; The Works of aphra behn, Vol. III. Bellamy, Edward.
http://www.gutenberg.org/browse/IA_B
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Author Index: B
Authors: A B C D ... other Titles: A B C D ... other Languages: Bulgarian Chinese Danish Dutch ... Yiddish
Babbage, Charles
Babbitt, E. C.
Bacheller, Irving
Bacheller, Irving, 1859-1950.
Bach, Johann Sebastian
Bacon, Delia
Bacon, Dolores
Bacon, Francis
Bacon, John Mackenzie
Baden-Powell of Gilwell, Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, Baron

62. Aphra Behn: Women's History
back, behn, aphra (16401689). aphra behn was a dramatist, novelist, and poet. Using the pen name Astraea, she was the first woman
http://www2.worldbook.com/features/whm/html/whm098.html
Behn, Aphra (1640-1689) Aphra Behn was a dramatist, novelist, and poet. Using the pen name "Astraea," she was the first woman in England to become a professional writer and the first woman to be accepted as a playwright in the male-dominated English theater. Her fiction was important in the development of the English novel and her work influenced the novelist Henry Fielding. Behn wrote more than 15 plays and in her own time was best known as a dramatist. Today, she is best known for her novel Oroonoko (1688) a vivid, realistic story about a noble black prince of Suriname who is enslaved by cruel white men. The novel is an important antislavery document. Behn was born in the county of Kent. She claimed to have learned the history of Prince Oroonoko while living as a child in Guyana. In 1666, King Charles II sent her to Holland as a spy. She returned to London in poverty a few years later and became a writer. She is buried in Westminster Abbey.

63. Books & Literature/Poetry/B/Behn, Aphra
Listings. Home Books Literature Poetry B behn, aphra. A Thousand Martyrs I Have Made A Thousand Martyrs I Have Made by aphra behn.
http://search.able2know.com/Books___Literature/Poetry/B/Behn__Aphra/
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64. Aphra Behn In Cyberspace
aphra behn IN CYBERSPACE AT BCCC Introduction to the Novel. aphra behn in Cyberspace. Welcome to our class page on aphra behn.
http://www.bucks.edu/~darrahs/alphra.htm
APHRA BEHN IN CYBERSPACE AT BCCC Introduction to the Novel
Aphra Behn in Cyberspace
Welcome to our class page on Aphra Behn. As we read and discuss Behn's "novel" Oroonoko , I would like you to visit some of the sites below to get a sense both of how Oroonoko fits into the history of the novel and of the specific issues to which it is related. You will also find below some study questions which we will discuss in class and on our email discussion list.

65. The San Antonio College LitWeb Aphra Behn Page
The aphra behn Page. ( 16401689 ). Major Works. About behn Victoria Sackville-West, aphra behn The Incomparable Astraea. Viking, 1928. aphra behn Society.
http://www.accd.edu/sac/english/bailey/behn.htm
The Aphra Behn Page
Major Works
. There are three inexpensive volumes of Behn's works available:
  • Oroonoko and Other Writings . Edited with an introduction by Paul Salzman. Oxford, 1994.
  • Love-Letters Between a Nobleman and His Sister . Edited and introduced by Janet Todd. Penguin,
  • Oroonoko, The Rover and Other Works .Edited by Janet Todd. Penguin, 1992.
    Drama
    The Rover; or, The Banished Cavaliers
    The City Heiress
    On Line
    The Widow Ranter; or, the History of Bacon in America
    Fiction
    Love Letters Between a Nobleman and his Sister
    Oroonoko
    Annotated Bibliography On Line . Also a Norton Critical Edition, Joanna Lipking, Editor. Norton, 1997.
    The Fair Jilt
    The History of the Nun

    " The Adventure of the Black Lady " ( 1696 ). " The Unfortunate Bride " ( 1696 ). The Unfortunate Happy Lady On-Line Love-Letters to a Gentleman Poetry Poems on Several Occasions About Behn Victoria Sackville-West, Aphra Behn: The Incomparable Astraea . Viking, 1928. Aphra Behn Society . Several links. Aphra Behn Criticism from Internet Public Library. The Aphra Behn Page The Incomparable Astrea. . .
  • 66. WWP Text List
    Barber, Mary Poems on Several Occasions, 1734 $16.00 Bath, Elizabeth Poems, On Various Occasions, 1806 $10.00 behn, aphra The Amorous Prince, 1671 $10.00 behn
    http://www.wwp.brown.edu/texts/printlist_author.html
    WWP The Texts List of Print Texts
    List of printed texts available
    Below is a list of texts available from the Women Writers Project in print format. For various technical reasons (which we hope will be overcome soon), not all of the texts on this list are available online, and not all of the texts in Women Writers Online appear in this list, although the two collections do overlap. Printouts are on 8.5 x 11 paper, unbound, suitable for photocopying for classroom use. If you do make copies, or include the text in a course packet, we ask that you pay a $1.00 royalty per copy to the Women Writers Project.
    Aikin, Lucy
    Epistles on Women, 1810
    Anger, Jane
    Her Protection for Women, 1589
    Anonymous
    Advice to Virgins by a Lady, c. 1692
    Anonymous
    The Brideling, Sadling and Ryding..., 1595
    Anonymous
    England's Tears, a Poem, 1774
    Anonymous
    The Female Wits, 1704
    Anonymous
    Swetnam, the Woman-hater, 1620
    Astell, Mary
    "In Emulation of Cowley's Poem Call'd the Motto" and Other Poems, 1689?
    Aston, Katherine (Thimelby)
    "A Discourse of a Dreame", c. 1650
    Bannerman, Anne

    67. Title-Level URLs For WWO
    Occasions, 1806. http//www.wwp.brown.edu/texts/behn.discovery.html, behn, aphra, A Discovery of New Worlds, Translator s Preface, 1688. http
    http://www.wwp.brown.edu/texts/license/titleURLs.html
    WWP Texts Licensing and Access Title-level URLs
    Title-level URLs
    This table lists individual urls for each text in the Women Writers Online collection. (Note that these are not the actual URLs for the texts, but aliases which redirect to the actual text.) You can also view the same list sorted by ID number , or download a plain-text list containing the URL, author, title, and ID number of each text. The ID number corresponds to the number found in the 036 field in the MARC record. Please email wwpcomments@brown.edu if you have suggestions for more useful ways we can provide this information. URL Author Title http://www.wwp.brown.edu/texts/aikin.epistles.html Aikin, Lucy Epistles on Women, 1810 http://www.wwp.brown.edu/texts/anger.protection.html Anger, Jane Jane Anger Her Protection for Women, 1589 http://www.wwp.brown.edu/texts/ariadne.venture.html Ariadne She Ventures, and He Wins, 1696 http://www.wwp.brown.edu/texts/askew.first.html Askew, Anne The First Examination of Anne Askew, 1546 http://www.wwp.brown.edu/texts/askew.fox.html Askew, Anne The Two Examinations of Anne Askew (Foxe), 1563

    68. Aphra Behn Bio
    aphra behn July 1640 April 16, 1689, London aphra behn broke every rule. From 1670 until her death in 1689, aphra behn enjoyed commercial triumph.
    http://www.nyct.net/cosmicleopard/Behn_bio.html
    Aphra Behn
    July 1640 - April 16, 1689, London

    Aphra Behn broke every rule. She was a spy, she was a writer, she was thrown in prison several times for her debts and her politics, she may or may not have been married and she had a live-in lover for nine years. Her origin a mystery, an unidentified child named Aphra traveled with a couple named Amis to Surinam (Dutch Guiana), then an English possession. Upon her return to England around the time of the Restoration, she may have married a London merchant named Behn. Her wit and beauty caught the eye of the royal court and she was employed by Charles II in secret service in The Netherlands. Unrewarded, and imprisoned for debt, she began to write to support herself. From 1670 until her death in 1689, Aphra Behn enjoyed commercial triumph. Her witty, vivacious comedies, such as The Rover (two parts, produced 1677 and 1681) and The Lucky Chance , were highly successful. She was well read, fluent in French and Italian with some Spanish, and she often adapted work by older dramatists. Her versatility, like her output, was immense, and in her day was rivaled only by that of her friend and colleague, John Dryden. Aphra Behn is considered the first professional English woman writer and originator of the novel in its modern form. This honor is often bestowed on Daniel Defoe, but Aphra Behn's

    69. The Mediadrome - Poems Of The Week: Aphra Behn
    Poems of the Week aphra behn. by John Stringer. aphra behn continued to write plays, and really this is what her fame really depended on.
    http://www.themediadrome.com/content/articles/words_articles/poems_aphra_behn.ht
    The Mediadrome
    Search WWW
    Poems of the Week: Aphra Behn by John Stringer Virginia Woolf (1882 – 1941), in her long essay A Room of One’s Own (1929) described the status of women and the difficulties encountered by women writers in a man’s world. In it, she says: "All women together ought to let flowers fall upon the tomb of Aphra Behn, which is, most scandalously but rather appropriately, in Westminster Abbey, for it was she who earned them the right to speak their minds. It is sheshady and amorous as she waswho makes it not quite fantastic for me to say to you tonight: Earn five hundred a year by your wits." Aphra was born in July, 1640, probably in Harbledown, a small town near Canterbury in the county of Kent in England. According to the Merriam-Webster Encyclopedia of Literature She had entered court circles (as they say), and was employed by King Charles II as a spy in Antwerp during the war against the Dutch (1665 – 1667). Her code name was ‘Astrea’ or Agent 160. According to one of the biographies of her, in this role “she successfully accomplished the objects of her mission; and in the latter end of 1666 she wormed out of one Van der Aalbert the design formed by De Ruyter, in conjunction with the DeWitts, of sailing up the Thames and burning the English ships in their harbours. This she communicated to the English court, but although the event proved her intelligence to have been well founded, it was at the time disregarded. Disgusted with political service, she returned to England.”

    70. Aphra Behn: A Brief Chronology
    Molly Brown. aphra behn a brief chronology. 1680 The Revenge, attributed to aphra behn. 1681 The Rover Part II; The False Count; The Roundheads.
    http://www.okima.com/cast/behn.html
    INVITATION TO A FUNERAL
    a tale of Restoration intrigue by
    Molly Brown
    Aphra Behn: a brief chronology circa 1640: Born. Details of her early life are vague. Birthplace may have been Kent, maiden name may have been Johnson. Also, she may have been adopted. 1663: Her (adopted?) father is appointed Lieutenant Governor of Surinam. The family travels to Surinam by ship, but her father dies on the voyage. circa May 1664: Returns to London. circa 1664: She marries a Dutch merchant named Behn, who later dies in the Plague. Or does she? Some writers have suggested her dead husband may have been a fabrication created to give her an air of respectability. July, 1666: She travels to Antwerp as a spy during the war against the Dutch. She is not paid for her services and has to borrow money in order to return home. Spring, 1667: Returns to London, heavily in debt. 1668: Unable to pay her debts, she is arrested and taken to prison. It is not clear which prison she went to, how long she was incarcerated, or who came up with the money to get her relased. September, 1670: She makes her debut as a playwright;

    71. Aphra Behn & The Noble Savage: Oroonoko - Notes & Online Sources
    • aphra behn (1640?1689) the Noble Savage •. Henri Matisse (1869-1954) National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. aphra behn (1640?-1689).
    http://music.acu.edu/www/iawm/pages/african/behn.html
    Henri Matisse (1869-1954) Above:
    Top of page:
    National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC
    Aphra Behn (1640?-1689) Set in Surinam in South America and published in 1688, Aphra Behn's OROONOKO tells the story of two royal slaves, Oroonoko, and his beloved Imoinda. This novella, or short novel, is credited with being the first to introduce the anticolonial idea of the "noble savage" to English fiction. Included below are citations, links, and books concerning the literary art of Aphra Behn and her masterpiece, Oroonoko. Also included are several audio CD's of Henry Purcell's incidental music composed for Behn's dramatic work, ABDELAZER, performed in 1695. Virginia Woolf counted Aphra Behn as the first woman to earn a living as a writer. According to Encarta Encyclopedia 97, CD-ROM: "Among Behn's many works are poems and plays, the latter including her most popular play, The Rover (1677; second part, 1681); The City Heiress (1682), a satire of London life; and The Luck Chance (1686), which explored one of Behn's favorite themes, the folly of arranged marriages. Her novel Oroonoko (1688?), the story of an African prince sold into slavery in Suriname, influenced the development of the English novel and is important for several reasons. It introduces the figure of the noble savage, later developed by Jean Jacques Rousseau, foreshadows later novels on the anticolonial theme, pioneers in the effort to depict a realistic background, and may be the first English philosophical novel. The novel formed the basis of a tragedy of the same name written by the English dramatist Thomas Southerne, produced in 1695."

    72. Aphra Behn (1640-1689) Writer
    30 of the Most Influential Women of the Millennium Women s History Month 2001, aphra behn (16401689) Writer. aphra behn (1640-1689).
    http://www.pinn.net/~sunshine/whm2001/behn.html
    Sunshine for Women
    WHM 2001, ToC
    Home Aphra Behn
      Esteemed as a writer in her own time, upon her death, Behn was buried in the East cloister of Westminster Abbey. In A Room of One's Own Virginia Woolf wrote that all women should "let flowers fall upon the tomb of Aphra Behn, for it was she who earned them the right to speak their minds." Although women had been writing for centuries, only a few women, such as Christine de Pizan (c.1364 - c.1431), had managed to earn their living by the pen. Indeed, only a few women had managed to earn an independent livelihood in any career. For the working class, there was plenty of work for women as washerwomen, brewsters, needleworkers, and the like, but then, as now, women were paid much less for their labor than men, and most women could not earn enough money to keep body and soul together. Women were forced to marry for their daily bread. For the rich and middle classes, only a few professions existed: governess and that's all I can think of at the moment. If the woman came from a Catholic family, she could take religious orders. Otherwise she was dependent on her family (her father, her brothers, or other close relatives), she married to establish her own family, or she became a courtesan or a prostitute. Her early life is shrouded in mystery, even the identity of her parents in unknown. Behn was possibly the Eaffry Johnson born to Bartholomew and Elizabeth Johnson in 1640 in Harbledon near Canterbury; in which case, her father was a barber. Somewhere along the line she became literate enough in French and Latin to produce English translations of works in those languages. How and where she acquired her education is unknown.

    73. ChooseBooks - Millions Of Used Books, Ephemera Waiting For You!
    aphra behn behn, aphra (attributed to) The Ten Pleasures of Marriage and the second part The Confession of the Newly Married Couple New York; Privately
    http://www.choosebooks.com/info_search_87.jsp

    74. Aphra Behn: A Who2 Profile
    aphra behn • Writer. Name at birth aphra Johnson In The aphra behn Society For serious scholars, some background and a syllabus, The
    http://www.who2.com/aphrabehn.html
    APHRA BEHN Writer Name at birth: Aphra Johnson In the 1660s, Aphra Behn served as a spy in Belgium for King Charles II, who had just gained the throne of England after the rule of the Cromwells . By 1670 her first play was produced, The Forced Marriage , the first in a string of successful plays. During the remainder of her life she wrote plays, poems and novels, and is considered one of the first women professional writers in the English language. The Aphra Behn Society
    For serious scholars, some background and a syllabus The Aphra Behn Page
    A student and fan explains Behn's significance Poetry of Aphra Behn
    Some brief biographical background, then a focus on her poetry Aphra Behn
    Snapshot biography from a site on theater history Birth:
    Birthplace:

    Near Canterbury
    England Death:
    16 April 1689 Best Known As:
    17th century English writer
    Shop for Posters

    at AllPosters.com

    75. Results In Early English Prose Fiction
    behn, aphra The Fair Jilt (1688); behn, aphra The History of the Nun (1689); behn, aphra LoveLetters Between a Noble-Man And his Sister, Part 1 (1684);
    http://www.letrs.indiana.edu/eepf/browse.html
    Browse the Early English Prose Fiction

    76. Gender Inn: Thematischer Suchindex
    Translate this page Wurzel des Thesaurus Disziplin 115 Literaturwissenschaft AutorInnen und Werke 113 behn, aphra 519 behn, Abdelazer, or, Moor´s Revenge 520 behn, Adventure of
    http://db.genderinn.uni-koeln.de/cgi-bin/n/suchindex?w=1d&id=113

    77. Aphra Behn, Oroonoko
    Jones. LC SUBJ HDG behn, aphra, 16401689 Criticism and interpretation. LC SUBJ HDG behn, aphra, 1640-1689 Biography. Authors
    http://faculty.goucher.edu/eng211/aphra_behn_oroonoko.htm
    Aphra Behn, Oroonoko, or The Royal Slave Genre: the work's genre is still debatable, but it claims to be a memoir and travel narrative (of Behn's years in the colony of "Surinam," later called Dutch Guiana), as well as the biography of Oroonoko, whom his captors called "Caesar." Form: prose. Characters: "I," a character in some sense modeled on the real-life Aphra Behn; Oroonoko , an African prince and later a slave to the English who called him "Caesar"; Imoinda , his lover, also enslaved and sometimes called "Clemene"; Jamoan , an opposing warrior chief who, conquered by Oroonoko, becomes his vassal; the King of Coramantien , whom Oroonoko serves and later betrays, and who betrays him; the slave-running English ship captain ; and various English colonists, especially the supposedly sympathetic plantation overseer named Trefrey , the colony's deputy governor named William Byam , the gallant Colonel Martin , and " Bannister , a wild Irishman" (1910). Summary: Issues and Research Sources:
  • Among other sources, Behn's invention of Orooonoko draws upon
  • 78. Behn, Aphra Renaissance Research Ranch
    behn, aphra Renaissance Research Ranch Post MessageThe Jolly RogerOne Page Version. Ahoy mate! Welcome to the behn, aphra Clic Renaissance Research Ranch.
    http://renaissances.com/z/ypoetsd/Behn,Aphrahall/shakespeare1.html
    Behn, Aphra Renaissance Research Ranch
    Post Message
    The Jolly Roger One Page Version
    Behn, Aphra Renaissance Research Ranch
    POETS RANCH
    RENAISSANCES.COM RANCHES
    Carolinanavy.com
    Jollyroger.com Quarterdeck ...
    hatteraslight.com
    Ahoy mate! Welcome to the Behn, Aphra Clic Renaissance Research Ranch. Post yer opinion, a link to ebooks, XML books, or html books, or some of yer work or a cool web resource, or yer thoughts regarding the best books, reviews, and criticisms concerning Behn, Aphra . We'd also like to invite ye to sail on by the Behn, Aphra Live Clics Chat please feel free to use the message board below to schedule a chat session. And the brave of heart shall certainly wish to sign their souls aboard The Jolly Roger Oak planks of reason, riveted with rhyme,
    designed to voyage across all of time.
    poet poetry poem poem

    Post Message
    The Jolly Roger One Page Version

    79. Behn, Aphra Poetry Renaissance Research Ranch
    behn, aphra Renaissances.com Research Reading Ranch POETRY RANCH If ye would like to moderate the behn, aphra Renaissance Research Ranch, please drop
    http://renaissances.com/z/ypoetry3d/Behn,Aphrahall/shakespeare1.html
    Behn, Aphra
    POETRY RANCH

    If ye would like to moderate the Behn, Aphra Renaissance Research Ranch, please drop gunslinger@renaissances.com a line.
    POETRY, Behn, Aphra , poet, and poem are ranch hands at xmlclics.com
    //Required //var site = '681666'; //var mnum = '139010'; //Not Required var max_words = 3; var max_links_per_word = 4; var link_color = '0107A1'; var boxbg_color = 'FFFAEA'; var boxtitle_color = 'black'; var boxdesc_color = 'black'; var boxurl_color = 'red'; DR. ELLIOT'S NORTH AMERICAN GREAT BOOKS TOURCOMING TO A BOOK STORE NEAR YOU
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    Search: Web Books Music Video Toys Video Games Electronics Software Hardware s Auctions Forums
    Howdy pardner! Welcome to the Behn, Aphra We'd also like to invite you to drop on by the Behn, Aphra Live Campfire Clics Chat please feel free to use the message board below to schedule a chat. Bought a gun and followed the sun out West,
    Of poets, I wanted to be the best.
    poet poetry poem poem Add Comment ] (If yer comment does not appear, hit the reload or refresh on.)

    80. Aphra Behn Life Stories, Books, & Links
    Stories about aphra behn s life and Loveletters between a Nobleman and his Sister, Oroonoko, or, the Royal Slave, Poems, Secret Life, Theatre.
    http://www.todayinliterature.com/biography/aphra.behn.asp
    Saturday May 29 th
    = registration required = premium members = electronic service
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    Aphra Behn - Life Stories, Books, and Links
    Biographical Information
    Stories about Aphra Behn

    Selected works by this author

    Selected books about / related to this author
    ...
    Recommended links

    BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION
    Aphra Behn, by Mary Beale.   ( source
    Aphra Behn (1640 - 1689)
    Category: English Literature
    Born: 1640
    London, England Died: 1689 London, England Related authors: Anne Bradstreet Virginia Woolf Vita Sackville-West list all writers APHRA BEHN - LIFE STORIES Aphra Behn, All Women On this day in 1640 Aphra Behn was baptized. The details of her birth and much of her "shady and amorous" life are unclear, but her place in literary history is certain: first epistolary novel, first philosophical novel, and a fifteen-play career which made her the first woman to earn her living by writing. "All women together ought to let flowers fall upon the tomb of Aphra Behn," wrote Virginia Woolf, "for it was she who earned them the right to speak their minds." top of page SELECTED WORKS BY THIS AUTHOR Love-letters between a Nobleman and his Sister fiction Oroonoko, or, the Royal Slave

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