ABSTRACT

How did gender figure in understandings of spatial realms, from the inner spaces of the body to the furthest reaches of the globe? How did women situate themselves in the early modern world, and how did they move through it, in both real and imaginary locations? How do new disciplinary and geographic connections shape the ways we think about the early modern world, and the role of women and men in it? These are the questions that guide this volume, which includes articles by a select group of scholars from many disciplines: Art History, Comparative Literature, English, German, History, Landscape Architecture, Music, and Women's Studies. Each essay reaches across fields, and several are written by interdisciplinary groups of authors. The essays also focus on many different places, including Rome, Amsterdam, London, and Paris, and on texts and images that crossed the Atlantic and the Mediterranean, or that portrayed real and imagined people who did. Many essays investigate topics key to the ’spatial turn’ in various disciplines, such as borders and their permeability, actual and metaphorical spatial crossings, travel and displacement, and the built environment.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

part I|86 pages

Frameworks

chapter 1|40 pages

History in the Present Tense

Feminist Theories, Spatialized Epistemologies, and Early Modern Embodiment

part II|102 pages

Embodied Environments

chapter 4|16 pages

Body Language

Keeping Secrets in Early Modern Narratives

chapter 5|14 pages

Bodies by the Book

Remapping Reputation in the Account of Anne Greene and Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing

chapter 6|26 pages

Envisioning a Global Environment for Blessed Teresa of Avila in 1614

The Beatification Decorations for S. Maria della Scala in Rome

chapter 8|24 pages

Attending to Fishwives

Views from Seventeenth-Century London and Amsterdam

part III|68 pages

Communities and Networks

chapter 9|10 pages

Baby Jesus in a Box

Commerce and Enclosure in an Early Modern Convent

chapter 10|16 pages

Within and Without

Women's Networks and the Early Modern Roman Convent

chapter 11|22 pages

Women's Kinship Networks

A Meditation on Creative Genealogies and Historical Labor