Sharon L. Jansen\u27s study of women and popular resistance in the reign of Henry VIII is an important work that breaks new ground and will be of value to a wide range of scholars. It is scrupulously well researched and shows a thorough grounding in the secondary literature on the politics of early Tudor England, women\u27s history, and feminist theory. Jansen focuses on four women, all of whom were executed for treason in the reign of Henry VIII: Elizabeth Wood, Margaret Cheyne, Elizabeth Barton, and Mabel Brigge. Yet none of these women had posed a direct, physical threat to the king. They had taken no part in armed rebellion. The government of Henry VIII, however, perceived them as a threat to stability of the realm. While Jansen admits ...
The societies in the Arden of Faversham (1592) and The Tragedy of Mariam (1613) reflect the patriarc...
Susan Dwyer Amussen has produced an extremely well-researched and gracefully written study on gender...
Mary of Guise, widow of James V of Scotland, is a fascinating woman, though one with a very differen...
Sharon L. Jansen\u27s study of women and popular resistance in the reign of Henry VIII is an importa...
Sharon Jansen is a historian who has published a number of fine books, including Dangerous Talk and ...
Sharon L. Jansen's Dangerous Talk and Strange Behaviour. Women and Popular Resistance to the Reform...
These two books on women writing in early modern England are very different and both make an importa...
A. N. McLaren\u27s study of political culture in the first part of the reign of Elizabeth is a thoug...
Anne Laurence\u27s study of the social history of women in early modem England has much to recommend...
Barbara Hanawalt presents her audience with an engaging and thoughtful set of interlocking essays th...
Mihoko Suzuki carefully puts together class and gender in her study, Subordinate Subjects: Gender, t...
Though there has been in recent years a substantial development in the research and writing on women...
In a clever play on words, Louis Montrose’s important new book on Elizabeth I suggests a study with ...
Phillippa Berry has written a solidly researched and ambitious study of the impact of Elizabeth I an...
Review of the Rule of Women in Early Modern Europe, edited by A.J. Cruz and M. Suzuk
The societies in the Arden of Faversham (1592) and The Tragedy of Mariam (1613) reflect the patriarc...
Susan Dwyer Amussen has produced an extremely well-researched and gracefully written study on gender...
Mary of Guise, widow of James V of Scotland, is a fascinating woman, though one with a very differen...
Sharon L. Jansen\u27s study of women and popular resistance in the reign of Henry VIII is an importa...
Sharon Jansen is a historian who has published a number of fine books, including Dangerous Talk and ...
Sharon L. Jansen's Dangerous Talk and Strange Behaviour. Women and Popular Resistance to the Reform...
These two books on women writing in early modern England are very different and both make an importa...
A. N. McLaren\u27s study of political culture in the first part of the reign of Elizabeth is a thoug...
Anne Laurence\u27s study of the social history of women in early modem England has much to recommend...
Barbara Hanawalt presents her audience with an engaging and thoughtful set of interlocking essays th...
Mihoko Suzuki carefully puts together class and gender in her study, Subordinate Subjects: Gender, t...
Though there has been in recent years a substantial development in the research and writing on women...
In a clever play on words, Louis Montrose’s important new book on Elizabeth I suggests a study with ...
Phillippa Berry has written a solidly researched and ambitious study of the impact of Elizabeth I an...
Review of the Rule of Women in Early Modern Europe, edited by A.J. Cruz and M. Suzuk
The societies in the Arden of Faversham (1592) and The Tragedy of Mariam (1613) reflect the patriarc...
Susan Dwyer Amussen has produced an extremely well-researched and gracefully written study on gender...
Mary of Guise, widow of James V of Scotland, is a fascinating woman, though one with a very differen...