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First published in 2000. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
An engaging account of women's travels in the early modern period.
This book showcases three Frenchwomen who ventured far from home at
a time when such traveling was rare. In 1639, Marie de
l'Incarnation embarked for New France where she founded the first
Ursuline monastery in present-day Canada. In 1750, Madame du
Boccage set out at the age of forty on her first "grand tour." She
visited England, the Netherlands, and Italy where she experienced
firsthand the intellectual liberty offered there to educated women.
As the Reign of Terror gripped France, the Marquise de la Tour du
Pin fled to America with her husband and their two young children,
where they ran a farm from 1794 to 1796. The writings these women
left behind detailing their respective journeys abroad represent
significant contributions to early modern travel literature. This
book makes available to anglophone readers three texts that are
rich in both historical and literary terms.
This volume provides an English translation of firsthand
testimonies by three early modern French women. It illustrates the
Huguenot experience of persecution and exile during the bloodiest
times in the history of Protestantism: the St. Bartholomew's Day
Massacre, the dragonnades, and the Huguenot exodus following the
Revocation of the Edict of Nantes. The selections given here
feature these women's experiences of escape, the effects of
religious strife on their families, and their reliance on other
women amid the terrors of war. Edited by Colette H. Winn.
Translated by Lauren King and Colette H. Winn The Other Voice in
Early Modern Europe: The Toronto Series, Vol. 68
This edition presents in English, for the first time, Jeanne
d'Albret's Letters to the king, his mother, his brother, her own
brother-in-law, and the queen of England, together with her Ample
Declaration (1568) defending her decampment to the Protestant
stronghold of La Rochelle. A historical-biographical introduction
situates these writings in the larger context of Reformation
politics and examines in detail the specific literary
characteristics of her memoir. In her works, Jeanne d'Albret
asserts her own position as legal sovereign of Bearn and Navarre
and situates herself at the nexus of overlapping political,
religious, and familial tensions.
The texts available here in English for the first time open a
window into the lives of three early modern Frenchwomen as they
explore the common themes of family, memory, sin, and salvation.
The Regrets of Marguerite d'Auge (1600), the Memoirs of Renee
Burlamacchi (1623), and the Genealogy of Jeanne du Laurens (1631),
taken from different genres of historical writings, raise important
questions: Why and how did female authorship find its way into the
historical record? How did these voices escape the censorship and
prejudice against female publication? In a time of extreme
religious conflict, how did these women convey their views on
controversial issues such as primacy of grace, indulgences, and
salvation without disrupting the gender expectations of the era?
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