Heresy trials and English women writers, 1400-1670 / Genelle Gertz.
2012
KD371.H47 G47 2012 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
Heresy trials and English women writers, 1400-1670 / Genelle Gertz.
Published
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2012.
Call Number
KD371.H47 G47 2012
ISBN
9781107017054 (cloth)
110701705X (cloth)
110701705X (cloth)
Description
x, 258 pages ; 24 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)779244880
Summary
"This book charts the emergence of women's writing from the procedures of heresy trials and recovers a tradition of women's trial narratives from the late Middle Ages to the seventeenth century. Analyzing the interrogations of Margery Kempe, Anne Askew, Marian Protestant women, Margaret Clitherow and Quakers Katherine Evans and Sarah Cheevers, the book examines the complex dynamics of women's writing, preaching and authorship under religious persecution and censorship. Archival sources illuminate not only the literary choices women made, showing how they wrote to justify their teaching even when their authority was questioned, but also their complex relationship with male interrogators. Women's speech was paradoxically encouraged and constrained, and male editors preserved their writing while shaping it to their own interests. This book challenges conventional distinctions between historical and literary forms while identifying a new tradition of women's writing across Catholic, Protestant and Sectarian communities and the medieval/early modern divide"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 227-251) and index.
Record Appears in
Gift
Purchased from the income of the Murray Fund
Gift

The Arthur W. Diamond Law Library
Purchased from the income of the Murray Fund
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
viii
Introduction: articulating women
1
1.
Belief papers and the literary genres of heresy trial
19
2.
Confessing Margery Kempe, 1413-1438
48
3.
Recanting and rewriting Anne Askew, 1540-1546
77
4.
Sanctifying ploughmen's daughters and butchers' wives: the interrogations of Alice Driver, Elizabeth Young, Agnes Prest, and Margaret Clitherow, 1555-1586
107
5.
Exporting inquisition: Katharine Evans and Sarah Cheevers at Malta, 1659-1663
144
Conclusion: visionaries, nonconformists, and the history of women's trial writing
174
Notes
181
Bibliography
227
Index
252