Fr. 81.00

Embodiment, Identity, and Gender in the Early Modern Age

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Embracing a multiconfessional and transnational approach that stretches from central Europe, to Scotland and England, from Iberia to Africa and Asia, this volume explores the lives, work, and experiences of women and men during the tumultuous fifteenth to seventeenth centuries.
The authors, all leading experts in their fields, utilize a broad range of methodologies from cultural history to women's history, from masculinity studies to digital mapping, to explore the dynamics and power of constructed gender roles. Ranging from intellectual representations of virginity to the plight of refugees, from the sea journeys of Jesuit missionaries to the impact of Transatlantic economies on women's work, from nuns discovering new ways to tolerate different religious expressions to bleeding corpses used in criminal trials, these essays address the wide diversity and historical complexity of identity, gender, and the body in the early modern age.
With its diversity of topics, fields, and interests of its authors, this volume is a valuable source for students and scholars of the history of women, gender, and sexuality as well as social and cultural history in the early modern world.

List of contents

Introduction  The body and manifestations of gender  1. The strange survival of the bleeding corpse  2. Martin Luther and the Reformation of virginity  3. Martin Luther's gendered reflections on Eve  4. A "Prodigal son" remembers John of the cross  5. Women, conflict, and peacemaking in German villages  6. James I and unruly women  Women between reform, subversion, and self-determination  7. Protestant and Catholic nuns confronting the Reformation  8. Female religious communities during the Thirty Years' War  9. Conflicts between male reformers and female monastics  10. Anna Maria van Schurman: poetry as exegesis  11. Sacral systems: the challenge of change  12. Catholic women in the Dutch Golden Age  13. Women and religious expression in Calvin's Geneva  Gendered dynamics of displacement, migration, and conflict  14. Women, gender, and religious refugees  15. Refugee wives, widows, and mothers  16. Did the Jesuits introduce "Global Studies"?  17. Devotion at sea: ship voyages and Jesuit masculinity  18. Spanish women, work, and the early modern Atlantic economy

About the author

Amy E. Leonard (Associate Professor of History at Georgetown University) focuses on women, gender, and sexuality in Reformation Germany. She is the author of Nails in the Wall: Catholic Nuns in Reformation Germany. She is currently working on a book that compares and contrasts changing views of female sexuality during the Reformations.
David M. Whitford (Professor of Reformation Studies at Baylor University) is a senior editor of The Sixteenth Century Journal. He is the author of A Reformation Life and The Curse of Ham in Early Modern Europe. He is currently working on the construction of masculinity during the Reformations.

Summary

Embracing a multiconfessional and transnational approach that stretches from central Europe, to Scotland and England, from Iberia to Africa and Asia, this volume explores the lives, work, and experiences of women and men during the tumultuous fifteenth to seventeenth centuries.

Product details

Authors Amy E. Leonard, David M. Whitford
Assisted by Amy Leonard (Editor), Amy E Leonard (Editor), Amy E. Leonard (Editor), David Whitford (Editor), David M Whitford (Editor), David M. Whitford (Editor)
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd.
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 31.12.2020
 
EAN 9780367507336
ISBN 978-0-367-50733-6
No. of pages 250
Dimensions 155 mm x 235 mm x 17 mm
Series Print on Demand
Subjects Education and learning > Teaching preparation > Vocational needs
Non-fiction book > History > Miscellaneous

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