Fr. 199.00

Gendering the Renaissance - Text and Context in Early Modern Italy

English · Hardback

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Description

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The essays in Gendering the Renaissance offer a nuanced picture of gender in early modern Italian literature and culture through overlapping lenses that bring into focus myriad issues, from race and religion to schooling and storytelling. Read in dialogue with one another, these interventions provide a multifaceted view of currents in gender studies and early modern Italy.

List of contents










Acknowledgments
Introduction: Beyond the Wall: Gender as Nexus
in Renaissance Italy 
Meredith K. Ray and Lynn Lara Westwater
Part I Gendering Genre
1 Widows, Lament, and Ottoman Anxieties in Renaissance Florence
Anna Wainwright
2 Unhappily Ever After: Moderata Fonte’s Fairy Tale
Suzanne Magnanini
3 Amerigo Vespucci and African Amazons: Reinventing Italian
Exploration in Baroque Epic Poetry
Nathalie Hester
Part II Gendering Identities
4 The Princess Nun: The Familiar Letters of Suor Eleonora d’Este
(1515–1575), Daughter of Lucrezia Borgia
Gabriella Zarri (translated by Giuseppe Bruno-Chomin)
5 A Christian Romance for Married Women: Marriage, Female
Spirituality, and the Pursuit of Saintliness in Antonia Pulci’s
Rappresentazione di Santa Guglielma
Emanuela Zanotti Carney
6 Maestre Pie Venerini and Filippini: Instituting Public Education 
for Women in Seventeenth-and Eighteenth-Century Lazio
Jennifer Haraguchi
Part III Gendering Sanctity
7 The State of Grace in the Libro del Cortegiano
Michael Sherberg
8 Singing Women, Saint Cecilia, and Self-Fashioning
in Seventeenth-Century Rome
Courtney Quaintance
9 “Polemics That Might Seem Spiteful in Heaven”: Female
Spiritual Authority in Arcangela Tarabotti’s Paradiso Monacale
Meredith K. Ray and Lynn Lara Westwater

Bibliography
Contributors
Index



About the author










Meredith K. Ray is Elias Ahuja Professor of Italian at the University of Delaware. Her books include Margherita Sarrocchi’s Letters to Galileo: Astronomy, Astrology, and Poetics in Seventeenth-Century Italy, Daughters of Alchemy: Women and Scientific Culture in Early Modern Italy, and Writing Gender in Women’s Letter Collections of the Italian Renaissance. Her translations include Machiavelli: Political, Historical, and Literary Writings, co-edited with Mark Jurdjevic and, with Lynn Lara Westwater, Arcangela Tarabotti’s Letters Familiar and Formal and Convent Paradise.

Lynn Lara Westwater is a professor of Italian at The George Washington University. Her books include Sarra Copia Sulam: A Salonnière and the Press in Counter-Reformation Venice; with Meredith K. Ray, critical editions of Arcangela Tarabotti’s Letters Familiar and Formal and Convent Paradise; and with Diana Robin, a critical edition of Ippolita Sforza’s writing titled Duchess and Hostage in Renaissance Naples: Letters and Orations.

 

Summary

The essays in Gendering the Renaissance offer a nuanced picture of gender in early modern Italian literature and culture through overlapping lenses that bring into focus myriad issues, from race and religion to schooling and storytelling. Read in dialogue with one another, these interventions provide a multifaceted view of currents in gender studies and early modern Italy.

Product details

Authors Emanuela Zanotti Carney, Jennifer Haraguchi, Nathalie Hester, Suzanne Magnanini, Courtney Quaintance, Michael Sherberg, Anna Wainwright, Anna Magnanini Wainwright, Gabriella Zarri
Assisted by Meredith K Ray (Editor), Meredith K. Ray (Editor), Lynn Lara Westwater (Editor)
Publisher Associated universities press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 14.04.2023
 
EAN 9781644533055
ISBN 978-1-64453-305-5
No. of pages 304
Series The Early Modern Exchange
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > Romance linguistics / literary studies

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