This thesis outlines two distinct modes of early sixteenth-century devotional practice (image-based and text-oriented), which in the context of the English reformation are increasingly represented as antithetical to one another, as Protestants champion the vernacular Bible and creed-based Christianity, while suppressing "idolatrous" images and traditional practices. Women readers, who tend to be vernacular readers, figure prominently in the religious controversy, and come to represent both the distinctives of Protestantism and anxieties around vernacular readership and hermeneutic agency. The vernacular woman reader stands in direct opposition to the priestly authority of masculine, Latin clerical culture; accordingly she is both rh...
Recent critical work upon medieval theological and devotional writings has identified a substantial ...
In Tudor and Stuart Britain, women writers were shaped by their culture, but they also helped to sha...
Devotional texts in late medieval England were notable for their flamboyant piety and their preoccup...
This dissertation argues that the Elizabethan settlement was a deliberate, self-conscious spiritual ...
This thesis examines laywomen’s responses to and participation in the early English Reformation, thr...
This thesis examines five devotional works written for or by women published between 1574 and 1624,...
This thesis examines the function and transmission of late medieval visionary writings with devotion...
This dissertation addresses the question of how early modern devotional readers defined a text as sp...
My dissertation focuses on representations of women and ritual on the Renaissance stage, situating s...
With the Reformation the female centres of worship, such as convents and beguine communities, disapp...
Contributing to the growing interest in early modern women and religion, this essay collection advan...
Although written to increase their female audience\u27s religious fervor, devotional texts implicitl...
Women as Translators in Early Modern England offers a feminist theory of translation that considers ...
This study seeks to trace the development of English Protestant literature from the time when evang...
The subject of this study is the translation into English of French Protestant works on religion in ...
Recent critical work upon medieval theological and devotional writings has identified a substantial ...
In Tudor and Stuart Britain, women writers were shaped by their culture, but they also helped to sha...
Devotional texts in late medieval England were notable for their flamboyant piety and their preoccup...
This dissertation argues that the Elizabethan settlement was a deliberate, self-conscious spiritual ...
This thesis examines laywomen’s responses to and participation in the early English Reformation, thr...
This thesis examines five devotional works written for or by women published between 1574 and 1624,...
This thesis examines the function and transmission of late medieval visionary writings with devotion...
This dissertation addresses the question of how early modern devotional readers defined a text as sp...
My dissertation focuses on representations of women and ritual on the Renaissance stage, situating s...
With the Reformation the female centres of worship, such as convents and beguine communities, disapp...
Contributing to the growing interest in early modern women and religion, this essay collection advan...
Although written to increase their female audience\u27s religious fervor, devotional texts implicitl...
Women as Translators in Early Modern England offers a feminist theory of translation that considers ...
This study seeks to trace the development of English Protestant literature from the time when evang...
The subject of this study is the translation into English of French Protestant works on religion in ...
Recent critical work upon medieval theological and devotional writings has identified a substantial ...
In Tudor and Stuart Britain, women writers were shaped by their culture, but they also helped to sha...
Devotional texts in late medieval England were notable for their flamboyant piety and their preoccup...