Early Modern Women’s Work
Kinship, Community, and Social Justice
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publishing:16th Apr '25
£145.00
This title is due to be published on 16th April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£39.99(9781032211312)
Early Modern Women’s Work examines the contributions of female writers, artists, scientists, religious leaders, and patrons who engaged in entrepreneurial, intellectual, and emotional labor in German-speaking Europe. Through individual and collective authorship, the women analyzed in this study assert a claim to kinship and community, often beyond the hegemonic, heteronormative relationships to family, religion, and monarch.
The contributions of early modern women to the construction of productive work spaces and the establishing of intellectual and actual communities are often overlooked or underestimated in scholarship on this period. This book serves as a cultural corrective to suppositions of gender-coded work, because alongside the dominant history of the private sphere as a feminine domain, a counter-narrative emerges with collective authorship. Despite the disparities in their biographies, the women whose work Simpson foregrounds highlight a range of early modern concerns, primarily but not exclusively in German-speaking Europe. These include debates about women’s education and erudition; migration and displacement in search of religious or professional freedom; a persistent but varied discourse about female authorship and creative agency; and the assertion of subjectivity against the violent, fractious history of the Thirty Years’ War.
This book will be an ideal resource for students, scholars and all those interested in German and European studies, women and gender studies, and the history of early modern work.
ISBN: 9781032211329
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
226 pages