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Doubting Women in Early Modern Italy: Gender, Uncertainty, and Agency

Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

Abstract

This book explores early modern Italian women as agents of doubt. While women were often considered prone to doubt as a result of their natural weakness, the essays gathered here reverse this view, demonstrating how women were able to embrace doubt as a means to expand their agency. Using doubt to contest both official narratives as well as religious and civil practices, women were able to carve out a space of their own in contemporary culture and society. The volume covers a period from the late fifteenth to the mid seventeenth centuries, offering critical insight into early modern doubt and investigating how doubt, like other categories of thought, could be gendered. Contributors address the topics of doubt and the Querelle des Femmes, religion, writing, and social networks. The volume offers a multidisciplinary approach to early modern doubt, combining gender studies with religious history, the history of literature, social history, and the history of science.

Original languageEnglish
PublisherTaylor and Francis
Number of pages182
ISBN (Electronic)9781003694229
ISBN (Print)9789463721684
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 1 2025

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