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Women’s Private Practices of Knowledge Production in Early Modern Europe

Posted By: AvaxGenius
Women’s Private Practices of Knowledge Production in Early Modern Europe

Women’s Private Practices of Knowledge Production in Early Modern Europe by Natacha Klein Käfer, Natália da Silva Perez
English | PDF EPUB (True) | 2023 | 150 Pages | ISBN : 3031447301 | 14.8 MB

This book explores knowledge practices by five women from different European contexts. Contributors document, analyze, and discuss how women employed practices of privacy to pursue knowledge that did not necessarily conform with the curriculum prescribed for them. The practices of Jane Lumley in England, Camila Herculiana in Padua, Victorine de Chastenay in Paris, as well as Elisabeth Sophie Marie and Philippine Charlotte in Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, will help us to exemplify the delicate balance between audacity and obedience that women had to employ to be able to explore science, literature, philosophy, theology, and other types of learned activities. Cases range from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century, presenting continuities and discontinuities across temporal and geographical lines of the strategies that women used to protect their knowledge production and retain intact their reputations as good Christian daughters, wives, and mothers. Taken together, the essays show how having access to privacy—the ability to regulate access to themselves while studying and learning—was a crucial condition for the success of the knowledge activities these women pursued.

Managing Mobility in Early Modern Europe and its Empires: Invited, Banished, Tolerated

Posted By: AvaxGenius
Managing Mobility in Early Modern Europe and its Empires: Invited, Banished, Tolerated

Managing Mobility in Early Modern Europe and its Empires: Invited, Banished, Tolerated by Katja Tikka, Lauri Uusitalo, Mateusz Wyżga
English | PDF EPUB (True) | 2023 | 232 Pages | ISBN : 3031418883 | 17.3 MB

This book examines how migration and mobility were controlled, supported, and restricted in early modern Europe and European colonies. The aim of the book is to investigate how different actors, such as rulers, regional lords, local authorities, and corporations tried to regulate different forms of mobility and how those on the move reacted to these attempts. The book examines the agency of both the authorities and the migrants, shifting focus between the macro and the micro level. The chapters will also illuminate the ways gender, religion, language, ethnicity, occupation, and socioeconomic status were entangled in the regulations concerning mobility. Control of migration is inextricably linked with power relations. In this book, mobility is seen as a wide social process, which covers daily or seasonal movement as well as less or more stable migration.

Suicide by Proxy in Early Modern Germany: Crime, Sin and Salvation

Posted By: AvaxGenius
Suicide by Proxy in Early Modern Germany: Crime, Sin and Salvation

Suicide by Proxy in Early Modern Germany: Crime, Sin and Salvation by Kathy Stuart
English | PDF EPUB (True) | 2023 | 480 Pages | ISBN : 3031252438 | 131 MB

Suicide by Proxy became a major societal problem after 1650. Suicidal people committed capital crimes with the explicit goal of “earning” their executions, as a short-cut to their salvation. Desiring to die repentantly at the hands of divinely-instituted government, perpetrators hoped to escape eternal damnation that befell direct suicides. Kathy Stuart shows how this crime emerged as an unintended consequence of aggressive social disciplining campaigns by confessional states. Paradoxically, suicide by proxy exposed the limits of early modern state power, as governments struggled unsuccessfully to suppress the tactic. Some perpetrators committed arson or blasphemy, or confessed to long-past crimes, usually infanticide, or bestiality. Most frequently, however, they murdered young children, believing that their innocent victims would also enter paradise. The crime had cross-confessional appeal, as illustrated in case studies of Lutheran Hamburg and Catholic Vienna.

Reading the Early Modern English Diary

Posted By: AvaxGenius
Reading the Early Modern English Diary

Reading the Early Modern English Diary by Miriam Nandi
English | PDF EPUB (True) | 2021 | 199 Pages | ISBN : 3030423263 | 3.6 MB

Reading the Early Modern Diary traces the historical genealogy, formal characteristics, and shifting cultural uses of the early modern English diary. It explores the possibilities and limitations the genre held for the self-expression of a writer at a time which considerably pre-dated the Romantic cult of the individual self. The book analyzes the connections between genre and self-articulation: How could the diary come to be associated with emotional self-expression given the tedium and repetitiveness of its early seventeenth-century ancestors? How did what were once mere lists of daily events evolve into narrative representations of inner emotions? What did it mean to write on a daily basis, when the proper use of time was a heavily contested issue? Reading the Early Modern Diary addresses these questions and develops new theoretical frameworks for discussing interiority and affect in early modern autobiographical texts.

Persia in Early Modern English Drama, 1530–1699: The Imagined Empire

Posted By: AvaxGenius
Persia in Early Modern English Drama, 1530–1699: The Imagined Empire

Persia in Early Modern English Drama, 1530–1699: The Imagined Empire by Chloë Houston
English | PDF EPUB | 2023 | 300 Pages | ISBN : 3031226178 | 5.1 MB

​This book is a study of the representation of the Persian empire in English drama across the early modern period, from the 1530s to the 1690s. The wide focus of this book, encompassing thirteen dramatic entertainments, both canonical and little-known, allow it to trace the changes and developments in the dramatic use of Persia and its people across one and a half centuries. It explores what Persia signified to English playwrights and audiences in this period; the ideas and associations conjured up by mention of ‘Persia’; and where information about Persia came from. It also considers how ideas about Persia changed with the development of global travel and trade, as English people came into people with Persians for the first time. In addressing these issues, this book provides an examination not only of the representation of Persia in dramatic material, but of the broader relationship between travel, politics and the theatre in early modern England.

The Writing of Natural Disaster in Europe, 1500–1826: Events in Excess

Posted By: AvaxGenius
The Writing of Natural Disaster in Europe, 1500–1826: Events in Excess

The Writing of Natural Disaster in Europe, 1500–1826: Events in Excess by Sandhya Patel, Sophie Chiari
English | PDF | 2022 (2023 Edition) | 182 Pages | ISBN : 3031121198 | 3.3 MB

This book explores reactions to and representations of natural disasters in early modern Europe. The contributors illustrate how the cultural production of the period - in manuals, treatises, sermons, travelogues and fiction - grappled with environmental catastrophe. Crucially, they interrogate how people in the early modern era rationalized and mediated the threat of events like plagues, great frosts, storms, floods and earthquakes. A vital contribution to environmental history, this book highlights the parallels between early modern responses to natural disaster and climate anxiety in our own era.

Medicine, Madness and Social History: Essays in Honour of Roy Porter

Posted By: AvaxGenius
Medicine, Madness and Social History: Essays in Honour of Roy Porter

Medicine, Madness and Social History: Essays in Honour of Roy Porter by Roberta Bivins, John V. Pickstone
English | PDF | 2007 | 302 Pages | ISBN : 0230525490 | 2.8 MB

Written in honour of eminent historian Roy Porter by twenty of his colleagues and students, the collection renders cutting edge scholarship accessible. Historians from the three fields that Porter made his own - the histories of medicine, madness, and the Enlightenment - illustrate his influence while tackling major themes ranging from disability rights to the popularization of science. In their accounts, artisan gardeners jostle with anarchists, dentists, and hypnotists in a lively, and very Porterian, parade.

A History of France, 1460–1560: The Emergence of a Nation State

Posted By: AvaxGenius
A History of France, 1460–1560: The Emergence of a Nation State

A History of France, 1460–1560: The Emergence of a Nation State by David Potter
English | PDF | 1995 | 455 Pages | ISBN : 0333541243 | 43.4 MB

A survey of French history from the reign of Louis XI to the outbreak of the Wars of Religion that isolates some of the controversial theories of the period: state building, nobility and clientage and the Reformation and discusses them with full attention to the regional diversity of France. It also introduces the reader to recent research on the court and government set in the context of the basic social and economic movements of the period. It is argued that the basic identity of France as a nation was reinforced under the aegis of monarchical legitimacy backed by the nobility and the church, setting the pattern for the rest of the Ancien Regime.