Protestantism, politics, and women in Britain, 1660-1714
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Protestantism, politics, and women in Britain, 1660-1714
(Early modern history : society and culture)
Palgrave Macmillan, 2013
Available at 1 libraries
Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 212-231) and index
Summary: "This book is the study of how women writers, booksellers, spies, rebels, outlaws, poets, widows, wives, mothers, gentlewomen, shopkeepers, and one queen - all of whom were spiritually inspired - made a difference in the political events of the eras of Restoration and Revolution in Britain. It speaks to both Dissenting women at the margins of society and Anglican women at the centre, demonstrating that what mattered to women in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth century, and what propelled them into the political sphere, were issues of liberty of conscience and the survival of Protestantism at home and abroad in the face of an encroaching Counter-Reformation Catholicism at the Stuart court and in Europe."--Publisher's website
Contents of Works
- Introduction: Nursing Mothers and Sanctified Sisters: Women's Political Behavior after the Restoration
- Nursing Mothers: Dissenting Women and Opposition Politics
- A Dangerous Woman: Mary Speke, her Family and the Puritan Gentry
- Sanctified Sisters: Aphra Behn and the Culture of Nonconformity
- An Incomparable Queen: Mary II, the Protestant International, and the Church of England
- Devoted Daughters of the Church: Elizabeth Burnet and Mary Astell
- Conclusion: Stuart Women and Political Culture
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Table of Contents
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