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Early Modern Women and Religious Innovation

The Development of the European Enlightenment

Early Modern Women and Religious Innovation cover

Early Modern Women and Religious Innovation

The Development of the European Enlightenment

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Pre-order. Available 14 May 2026
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Description

An innovative and groundbreaking study into women's contribution to the development of religious, metaphysical, and political concepts in early modern Europe.

By examining the engagement of women in both the daily practice of religion, and theological and political discussions following the Reformation, this collection expands our understanding of women's position in post-Reformation churches and their participation in theological debates.

What role did women play in these congregations and what social interactions did they have with each other and their male fellows? What literary genres did they choose to convey new ideas and new approaches to religion and society? Did religious authorities use universal strategies when dealing with religious dissent, or was there a gendered bias towards dissenting women?

A team of scholars from philosophy, early modern studies, intellectual history and theology address these questions and more, providing a multidisciplinary exploration of women's active participation in religious communities. Focusing on their contribution to foundational Enlightenment concepts, they shed light on the development of democracy, egalitarianism, freedom of conscience and of expression, and tolerant co-existence.

Covering countries such as Britain, the Netherlands, France, and Italy between 1500 and 1700, this is a much-needed comparative overview. We see how a different approach to the history of European women and their religious engagement can challenge the accepted view of an avowedly secular Enlightenment.

Table of Contents

Introduction, Katherine O'Donnell (Professor of the History of Ideas, UCD School of Philosophy, University College Dublin, Ireland) and Francesco Quatrini (Marie Sklodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow, School of Philosophy, University College Dublin, Ireland)

Part I: Women as Religious Innovators
1. Divine Maternity and Mysticism in Seventeenth-Century British Radical Religion, Sarah Apetrei (Director of Graduate Studies for the Faculty of Theology and Religion, Oxford University)
2. Early Quaker Women's Theology and Practice: Gender, Equality, Freedom and the Inward Light, Hilary Hinds (Professor of Literary Culture in the Department of English Literature and Creative Writing at Lancaster University, UK)
3. Hutchinson on Sex, Lucretius, and Original Sin, Enrico Piergiacomi (Assistant Professor in history of philosophy, Israel Institute of Technology)
4. Psychological Blackness in the Visions of Jane Leade, William Miller (Assistant Professor of English, University of Rochester, USA)

Part II: Female Leadership in Religious Communities Over and Against Men
5. Reform and Resistance in the 1540s: How the Diest Beguines Tried to Get Rid of Their Priest, Sarah Moran (Associate Professor of Art History, Utrecht University, The Netherlands)
6. Beyond the Literature: New Elements in the Diodata Malvasia's Case. Year 1606, Catholic Nuns after Tridentine Council, Isabel Danielle Harvey (Professor of Early Modern Italian History, Université du Québec à Montréal, Canada)
7. The Port-Royal Nuns' “relations de captivité”: Subversive Feminine Writings in Louis XIV's France, Giada Silenzi (PhD candidate, Linguistic and Literary Sciences at the University of Udine)
8. Women, Freedom, and the Counterpublics: Female Opposition to the Reformed Church in the Dutch Republic (c.1650-1700), Francesco Quatrini (Marie Sklodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow, School of Philosophy, University College Dublin, Ireland)

Part III: Early Enlightenment Women Between Religion and Politics
9. A “bright spirit of the age” or a “boring old maid?” Marie de Gournay and Her Critics, 1594-1645, Dominique Rigby (PhD candidate, Intellectual History and the History of Political Thought, University of Cambridge, UK)
10. Navigating Melancholy: How Three English Women Defended Religious Dissent (1660-1700), Finola Finn (Postdoctoral Researcher, Leibniz University, Germany
11. Intellectual Pursuits and Piety: Barrier-breaking Women in the Radical Enlightenment of the Dutch Republic, Hannah Laurens (Lecturer, Philosophy, University of Oxford, UK)
12. The Motif of the “domineering woman” in Dutch prints (1566-1700) Emmanouela Kyriakopoulou (PhD candidate in Art History, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece)

Conclusion, Katherine O'Donnell (Professor of the History of Ideas, UCD School of Philosophy, University College Dublin, Ireland) and Francesco Quatrini (Marie Sklodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow, School of Philosophy, University College Dublin, Ireland)
Index

Product details

Bloomsbury Academic Test
Published 14 May 2026
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Extent 256
ISBN 9781350510562
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Dimensions 234 x 156 mm
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

Katherine O’Donnell

Katherine O’Donnell is Professor, History of Ideas…

Anthology Editor

Francesco Quatrini

Francesco Quatrini is a Marie Sklodowska-Curie Pos…

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