Authority, Religion, and Women Writers in the Italian Counter-Reformation: Teaching Diodata Malvasia’s Histories

Recent decades have seen the rediscovery of a significant number of texts authored by Italian women between 1560 and 1630. And yet the commonplace that the Counter-Reformation silenced women writers has persisted. One figure useful for teaching a more nuanced vision of post-Tridentine Italy is the B...

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Main Author: Shannon McHugh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-04-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/9/4/120
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spelling doaj-8e4dadc43307487aa764e97eea5348f22020-11-24T21:07:56ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442018-04-019412010.3390/rel9040120rel9040120Authority, Religion, and Women Writers in the Italian Counter-Reformation: Teaching Diodata Malvasia’s HistoriesShannon McHugh0Modern Languages, Literatures, and Cultures Department, University of Massachusetts, Boston, 100 William T. Morrissey Blvd, Boston, MA 02125-3393, USARecent decades have seen the rediscovery of a significant number of texts authored by Italian women between 1560 and 1630. And yet the commonplace that the Counter-Reformation silenced women writers has persisted. One figure useful for teaching a more nuanced vision of post-Tridentine Italy is the Bolognese nun Diodata Malvasia (c. 1532–post-1617). She authored a pair of histories recounting her convent’s efforts to maintain their way of life amidst an era of convent reform, employing strategies that capitalized on their education, familial and civic connections, and position of spiritual privilege. Malvasia’s writings demonstrate the ways in which women not only published in this period but began to speak with increasing authority. I offer some possibilities for how Malvasia’s chronicles can be used to teach students about women writers’ agency in post-Tridentine Italy, as well as the complex thinking with which one must approach a regime like the Counter-Reformation.http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/9/4/120Counter-ReformationItalywomen writersconvent chroniclesBolognaDiodata Malvasia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shannon McHugh
spellingShingle Shannon McHugh
Authority, Religion, and Women Writers in the Italian Counter-Reformation: Teaching Diodata Malvasia’s Histories
Religions
Counter-Reformation
Italy
women writers
convent chronicles
Bologna
Diodata Malvasia
author_facet Shannon McHugh
author_sort Shannon McHugh
title Authority, Religion, and Women Writers in the Italian Counter-Reformation: Teaching Diodata Malvasia’s Histories
title_short Authority, Religion, and Women Writers in the Italian Counter-Reformation: Teaching Diodata Malvasia’s Histories
title_full Authority, Religion, and Women Writers in the Italian Counter-Reformation: Teaching Diodata Malvasia’s Histories
title_fullStr Authority, Religion, and Women Writers in the Italian Counter-Reformation: Teaching Diodata Malvasia’s Histories
title_full_unstemmed Authority, Religion, and Women Writers in the Italian Counter-Reformation: Teaching Diodata Malvasia’s Histories
title_sort authority, religion, and women writers in the italian counter-reformation: teaching diodata malvasia’s histories
publisher MDPI AG
series Religions
issn 2077-1444
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Recent decades have seen the rediscovery of a significant number of texts authored by Italian women between 1560 and 1630. And yet the commonplace that the Counter-Reformation silenced women writers has persisted. One figure useful for teaching a more nuanced vision of post-Tridentine Italy is the Bolognese nun Diodata Malvasia (c. 1532–post-1617). She authored a pair of histories recounting her convent’s efforts to maintain their way of life amidst an era of convent reform, employing strategies that capitalized on their education, familial and civic connections, and position of spiritual privilege. Malvasia’s writings demonstrate the ways in which women not only published in this period but began to speak with increasing authority. I offer some possibilities for how Malvasia’s chronicles can be used to teach students about women writers’ agency in post-Tridentine Italy, as well as the complex thinking with which one must approach a regime like the Counter-Reformation.
topic Counter-Reformation
Italy
women writers
convent chronicles
Bologna
Diodata Malvasia
url http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/9/4/120
work_keys_str_mv AT shannonmchugh authorityreligionandwomenwritersintheitaliancounterreformationteachingdiodatamalvasiashistories
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