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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: J. DelRosso , L. Eicke , Kenneth A. LoparoPublisher: Palgrave Macmillan Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.465kg ISBN: 9780230600256ISBN 10: 0230600255 Pages: 253 Publication Date: 20 December 2007 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsUnruly Catholic Women Writers Through the Centuries; J.DelRosso, L.Eicke & Ana Kothe Female as Flesh in the Later Middle Ages and the 'Bodily Knowing' of Angela of Foligno; J.Judge 'I grab the microphone and move my body': Volatile Speech, Volatile Bodies, and the Church's Attempt to Measure Holiness; M.C.Bodden Letters from the Convent: St. Teresa of Ávila's Epistolary Mode; J.Cammarata Talking Out of Church: Women Arguing Theology in Sor Juana's loa to the Divino Narciso ; J.Gillespie Angela Carranza, Would-Be Theologian; S.Schlau Resituating Carvajal's Vida in Protonovelistic Narratives; A.Kothe Through the Grate; Or, English Convents and the Transmission and Preservation of Female Catholic Recusant History; T.M.McArthur 'Must her own words do all?': Domesticity, Catholicism and Activism in Adelaide Anne Procter's Poems; C.L.Hoeckley The Legacy of Laveau in the Practice of Helen Prejean: The Tradition and Territory of New Orleans Spiritual Advisors; B.Eckstein 'Reluctant Catholics': Contemporary Irish-American Women Writers; S.Ebest Marie-Claire Blais Revises John Keats: Sadean Moments and Anti-Catholic Sentiment in Une saison dans la vie d'Emmanuel ; B.P.Robertson Catholicism's Other(ed) Holy Trinity: Race, Class, and Gender in Black Catholic Girl School Narratives; J.DelRosso Challenging Catholicism: Hagar vs. the Virgin in Graciela Limón's The Memories of Ana Calderón ; M.J.Suero-Elliott Dis-robing the Priest: Gender and Spiritual Conversions in Louise Erdrich's The Last Report on the Miracle at Little No Horse; P.RaderReviewsDedicated to 'unruly women everywhere, ' this collection of essays is as provacative as it is academic. Who would expect a collection of scholarly writings about Catholicism to include chapters titled, 'I Grab the Microphone and Move My Body' and 'Dis-robing the Priest'? But my favorite essay cites correlation in the work of sister Helen Prejean (of Dead Man Walking fame) and that of voodoo priestess Marie Laveau. Who knew? - John Lewis, Balitmore Magazine This is a sophisticated, varied, and provocative collection that captures the current debates about the Catholic Church and women - whether misogynist and oppressive or ultimately liberatory - and applies that range of positions to a wonderful range of writings by Catholic women writers from many traditions - Renaissance English and Spanish, United States, Canadian, French, Native American, Caribbean, and Mexican-American. It will be a welcome addition to the field. - Jane L. Donawerth, University of Maryland Distinguished Scholar-Teacher; Co-editor of the journal, Early Modern Women: An Interdisciplinary Journal Dedicated to 'unruly women everywhere,' this collection of essays is as provacative as it is academic. Who would expect a collection of scholarly writings about Catholicism to include chapters titled, 'I Grab the Microphone and Move My Body' and 'Dis-robing the Priest'? But my favorite essay cites correlation in the work of sister Helen Prejean (of Dead Man Walking fame) and that of voodoo priestess Marie Laveau. Who knew? - John Lewis, Balitmore Magazine This is a sophisticated, varied, and provocative collection that captures the current debates about the Catholic Church and women - whether misogynist and oppressive or ultimately liberatory - and applies that range of positions to a wonderful range of writings by Catholic women writers from many traditions - Renaissance English and Spanish, United States, Canadian, French, Native American, Caribbean, and Mexican-American. It will be a welcome addition to the field. - Jane L. Donawerth, University of Maryland Distinguished Scholar-Teacher; Co-editor of the journal, Early Modern Women: An Interdisciplinary Journal <p> Dedicated to 'unruly women everywhere, ' this collection of essays is as provacative as it is academic. Who would expect a collection of scholarly writings about Catholicism to include chapters titled, 'I Grab the Microphone and Move My Body' and 'Dis-robing the Priest'? But my favorite essay cites correlation in the work of sister Helen Prejean (of Dead Man Walking fame) and that of voodoo priestess Marie Laveau. Who knew? --John Lewis, Balitmore Magazine <p> <p> This is a sophisticated, varied, and provocative collection that captures the current debates about the Catholic Church and women--whether misogynist and oppressive or ultimately liberatory--and applies that range of positions to a wonderful range of writings by Catholic women writers from many traditions--Renaissance English and Spanish, United States, Canadian, French, Native American, Caribbean, and Mexican-American. It will be a welcome addition to the field. --Jane L. Donawerth, University of Maryland Distinguished Scholar-Teacher; Co-editor of the journal, Early Modern Women: An Interdisciplinary Journal Dedicated to 'unruly women everywhere, ' this collection of essays is as provacative as it is academic. Who would expect a collection of scholarly writings about Catholicism to include chapters titled, 'I Grab the Microphone and Move My Body' and 'Dis-robing the Priest'? But my favorite essay cites correlation in the work of sister Helen Prejean (of Dead Man Walking fame) and that of voodoo priestess Marie Laveau. Who knew? --John Lewis, Balitmore Magazine This is a sophisticated, varied, and provocative collection that captures the current debates about the Catholic Church and women--whether misogynist and oppressive or ultimately liberatory--and applies that range of positions to a wonderful range of writings by Catholic women writers from many traditions--Renaissance English and Spanish, United States, Canadian, French, Native American, Caribbean, and Mexican-American. It will be a welcome addition to the field. --Jane L. Donawerth, University of Maryland Distinguished Scholar-Teacher; Co-editor of the journal, Early Modern Women: An Interdisciplinary Journal Author InformationJEANA DELROSSO is Chair of the English Department and Associate Professor of English and WomenAs Studies at the College of Notre Dame of Maryland, USA. LEIGH EICKE is Assistant Professor of English at Grand Valley State University in Michigan, USA. ANA KOETHE is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Puerto Rico, Mayagnez. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |