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E-raamat: Gendered Temporalities in the Early Modern World

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Is time gendered? This international, interdisciplinary anthology studies the early modern era to analyze how material objects express, shape, complicate, and extend human concepts of time and how people commemorate time differently. It examines conceptual aspects of time, such as the categories women and men use to define it, and the somatic, lived experiences of time ranging between an instant and the course of family life. Drawing on a wide array of textual and material primary sources, this book assesses the ways that gender and other categories of difference affect understandings of time.
 

Arvustused

"These two editions bring us one step closer to making women and their legacies part of the center, rather than the edge. As Dowd reminds us, early modern womens history and literature is still seen as marginal by the academy itself (262). This relegation to the margin can only be remedied if early modernists start embracing women, their histories, and their texts as integral parts of early modern studies. The essays in these two editions encourage their readers to do just that." - Lotte Fikkers, Leiden University, Journal of Early Modern History 25 (2021). Joint review with Women on the Edge in Early Modern Europe, Lisa Hopkins, Aidan Norrie, (eds), Amsterdam University Press, 2019

"Read as a whole, Gendered Temporalities is a powerful testament to the ongoing vitality of feminist frameworks for engaging material history, literary criticism, and theoretical debate." - Melissa E. Sanchez, Early Modern Women, Fall 2020

Introduction 7(12)
Merry E. Wiesner-Hanks
Part I Temporality and materiality
1 Time, gender, and the mystery of English wine
19(28)
Frances E. Dolan
2 Women in the sea of time Domestic dated objects in seventeenth-century England
47(22)
Sophie Cope
3 Time, gender, and nonhuman worlds
69(26)
Emily Kuffner
Elizabeth Crachiolo
Dyani Johns Taff
Part II Frameworks and taxonomy of time
4 Telling time through medicine
95(20)
A gendered perspective
Alisha Rankin
5 Times told
115(20)
Women narrating the everyday in early modern Rome
Elizabeth S. Cohen
6 Genealogical memory
135(24)
Constructing female rule in seventeenth-century Aceh
Su Fang Ng
7 Feminist queer temporalities in Aemilia Lanyer and Lucy Hutchinson
159(28)
Penelope Anderson
Whitney Sperrazza
Part III Embodied time
8 Embodied temporality
187(26)
Lucrezia Tornabuoni de' Medici' ssacra storia, Donatello's Judith, and the performance of gendered authority in Palazzo Medici, Florence
Allie Terry-Fritsch
9 Maybe baby
213(22)
Pregnant possibilities in medieval and early modern literature
Holly Barbaccia
Bethany Packard
Jane Wanninger
10 Evolving families
235(26)
Realities and images of stepfamilies, remarriage, and half-siblings in early modern Spain
Grace E. Coolidge
Lyndan Warner
Epilogue
11 Navigating the future of early modern women's writing
261(22)
Pedagogy, feminism, and literary theory
Michelle M. Dowd
Index 283
Merry E. Wiesner-Hanks is Distinguished Professor of History Emerita at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She is the long-time Senior Editor of The Sixteenth Century Journal, and the author or editor of more than 30 books that have appeared in English, German, French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Greek, Chinese, Turkish, and Korean.