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Nuns as Historians in Early Modern Germany [Kõva köide]

(Fellow and College Lecturer, Selwyn College, Cambridge)
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The literary history of early modern German convents is a much neglected field. Nuns' writings were rarely printed and generally only read within their institution. In this study - the first to highlight the significance of this large body of writing - Charlotte Woodford provides an overview of nuns' literary activities in this period, an examination of how the tradition of monastic history became established in convents, and the variety of ways in which it permitted women to express their creativity.

Bringing together for the first time a significant collection of primary source material, Nuns as Historians in Early Modern Germany also includes a number of illuminating case studies, such as a biography of a fifteenth-century visionary, a prioress's diary, and an abbess's chronicle from the Thirty Years' War. It also offers a valuable reassessment of Caritas Pirckheimer's memoirs, written during the Reformation.

Arvustused

Charlotte Woodford's monograph is a major contribution to the emerging literature on convent writing and historical narration in the German empire. * Renaissance Quarterly * Woodford's meticulously researched study magnificently illuminates this unknown corpus of historical convent writing and ably delineates the nuanced approaches their authors adopted towards the past. * Renaissance Quarterly * Woodford's study is an invaluable guide to German convent writing. Thanks to her efforts, scholars can now compare the works of these Catholic writers with similar histories in Protestant religious communities and with the religious writing of other early modern women. * Renaissance Quarterly *

Abbreviations xv
Reading and Writing in Early Modern German Convents
1(30)
Introduction
1(14)
Nuns as Writers and Consumers of Literature
15(15)
Conclusion
30(1)
The Function of Early Modern Historiography Written by Nuns
31(47)
The Origins of the Tradition of Monastic Historiography
32(9)
Historiography in Early Modern Convents
41(36)
Conclusion
77(1)
Caritas Pirckheimer's (1467-1532) Denkwurdigkeiten in the Context of Convent Historiography
78(28)
Rereading the Denkwurdigkeiten
83(9)
The Function of the Denkwurdigkeiten as Historiography
92(12)
Conclusion
104(2)
From History to Autobiography: Two Accounts of the Thirty Years' War
106(38)
Introduction to the Accounts, their Genre and Function
107(18)
The Autobiographical Element of the Accounts
125(17)
Conclusion
142(2)
Historiography During the Thirty Years' War: The Writings of Juliana Ernst and Elisabeth Herold
144(41)
History as Biography: Juliana Ernst's (1589--1665) Chronik des Bickenklosters
146(18)
The Chronicle of Elisabeth Herold (1599--1657)
164(19)
Conclusion
183(2)
Conclusion
185(3)
Appendix: Brief Details of the Convents Where Histories Were Written 188(1)
Bibliography 189(36)
Index 225