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      Women and Religious Writing in Early Modern England

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      Cambridge University Press

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          Abstract

          This study challenges critical assumptions about the role of religion in shaping women's experiences of authorship. Feminist critics have frequently been uncomfortable with the fact that conservative religious beliefs created opportunities for women to write with independent agency. The seventeenth-century Protestant women discussed in this book range across the religio-political and social spectrums and yet all display an affinity with modern feminist theologians. Rather than being victims of a patriarchal gender ideology, Lady Anne Southwell, Anna Trapnel and Lucy Hutchinson, among others, were both active negotiators of gender and active participants in wider theological debates. By placing women's religious writing in a broad theological and socio-political context, Erica Longfellow challenges traditional critical assumptions about the role of gender in shaping religion and politics and the role of women in defining gender and thus influencing religion and politics.

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          Book
          9780521837583
          9780521100403
          9780511483707
          September 22 2009
          September 23 2004
          10.1017/CBO9780511483707
          92bf90a5-6346-4a6a-81f7-0db0c9e4aafd
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