Proposing activity as a useful category of analysis, this special issue considers Catholic and Protestant women in Europe and the Americas in the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries. We examine women in religious communities, which include both monastic communities as well as confessional communities. A close analysis of the social, economic, and cultural actions of these women religious challenges historiographical assumptions about monastic cloister and domestic space in the early modern period. In fact, we revisit monastic and domestic spaces to reveal them as stages for previously unexamined activity. This cross-denominational and transnational special issue highlights new spheres of women’s religious activity and raises new questions...
This dissertation examines women’s religiosity in early modern Spain, and it addresses the possibili...
This is the published version, also available here: http://www.dx.doi.org/10.1353/jowh.0.0154.This a...
The Reformation in Scotland brought with it a substantial theological shift in perspective toward th...
Third order women religious actively participated in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Italian soc...
While more and more attention is given to the writing and concerns of English women in the early mod...
Communities of religious women living and working outside the cloister had been founded before the D...
This paper charts both the wide variety of Christian women’s experiences of their faith in the early...
This volume is the product of a collaborative research program undertaken since 2014 by the Société ...
Early modern nuns seem poles apart from women in the West today. They strove after an ideal of perfe...
This timely study analyzes the 17th century revival of monasticism by English women who founded conv...
Organizers: Liise Lehtsalu, Brown University, and Sarah Moran, Universities of Bern and Antwerp Wom...
This thesis addresses the communities of English women religious founded after the Reformation on th...
English women religious were part of consistently changing, reforming and vibrant communities. The c...
This paper is an exploration of the expectations that medieval and early modem society held for wome...
This article examines the written fragments of a dispute of the 1620s between a group of nuns at St ...
This dissertation examines women’s religiosity in early modern Spain, and it addresses the possibili...
This is the published version, also available here: http://www.dx.doi.org/10.1353/jowh.0.0154.This a...
The Reformation in Scotland brought with it a substantial theological shift in perspective toward th...
Third order women religious actively participated in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Italian soc...
While more and more attention is given to the writing and concerns of English women in the early mod...
Communities of religious women living and working outside the cloister had been founded before the D...
This paper charts both the wide variety of Christian women’s experiences of their faith in the early...
This volume is the product of a collaborative research program undertaken since 2014 by the Société ...
Early modern nuns seem poles apart from women in the West today. They strove after an ideal of perfe...
This timely study analyzes the 17th century revival of monasticism by English women who founded conv...
Organizers: Liise Lehtsalu, Brown University, and Sarah Moran, Universities of Bern and Antwerp Wom...
This thesis addresses the communities of English women religious founded after the Reformation on th...
English women religious were part of consistently changing, reforming and vibrant communities. The c...
This paper is an exploration of the expectations that medieval and early modem society held for wome...
This article examines the written fragments of a dispute of the 1620s between a group of nuns at St ...
This dissertation examines women’s religiosity in early modern Spain, and it addresses the possibili...
This is the published version, also available here: http://www.dx.doi.org/10.1353/jowh.0.0154.This a...
The Reformation in Scotland brought with it a substantial theological shift in perspective toward th...