Volume 13.1 – Fall 2018

Essays
- Pushing Boundaries: Women, Music, and the Life of Ana de Mendoza y de la Cerda, Princess of Eboli
— Ascensión Mazuela-Anguita
- “Taken Weak in My Outward Man”: The Paradox of the Pathologized Female Prophet
— Alexis Butzner
- Patronage and the Power of the Pen: The Making of the French Royal Midwife Louise Bourgeois
— Bridgette A. Sheridan
Forum: Rethinking Methodologies in Early Modern Women’s Studies
- The Case for a Feminist Return to Form
— Lara Dodds and Michelle M. Dowd
- Digging through the Archive Together: Collaborative Research in Medieval Gender and Jewish History
— Alexandra Guerson and Dana Wessell Lightfoot
- From Recovery to Restoration: Aphra Behn and Feminist Bibliography
— Kate Ozment
- A Feminist Picture Atlas: Images of Lactation in Medieval and Early Modern Art
— Jutta Sperling
- Becoming Visible: Recipes in the Making Rebecca Laroche, Elaine Leong, Jennifer Munroe,
— Hillary M. Nunn, Lisa Smith, and Amy L. Tigner
- Making Her Turn Around: The Verb-Oriented Method, the Two-Supporter Model, and the Focus on Practice
— Maria Ågren
- Using Network Analysis to Understand Early Modern Women
— Catherine Medici
- Studying Early Modern Women Writers: The Digital Humanities Turn
— Nieves Baranda
Book Reviews
- Nieves Baranda and Anne J. Cruz, eds., The
Routledge Research Companion to Early Modern Spanish Women Writers
— Alison Weber
- Johanna Ilmakunnas, Marjatta Rahikainen, and
Kirsi Vainio-Korhonen, eds., Early Professional Women in Northern Europe,
c.1650–1850.
— Dag Lindström
- Diana Robin and Lynn Lara Westwater, eds. and
trans., Ippolita Maria Sforza: Duchess and Hostage in Renaissance Naples:
Letters and Orations
— Judith Bryce
- Linda M. Heywood, Njinga of Angola: Africa’s
Warrior Queen
— Christine Saidi
- Martin Ingram, Carnal Knowledge: Regulating
Sex in England, 1470–1600
— Tim Stretton
- Paula McQuade, Catechisms and Women’s Writing
in Seventeenth-Century England
— Micheline White
- Aileen Ribeiro, Clothing Art: The Visual
Culture of Fashion, 1600–1914
— Kathleen M. Oliver
- Bryce Traister, Female Piety and the
Invention of American Puritanism
— Marilyn J. Westerkamp
- Craig A. Monson, Habitual Offenders: A True
Tale of Nuns, Prostitutes, and Murderers in Seventeenth-Century Italy
— Judith C. Brown
- Ariel Hessayon, ed., Jane Lead and her
Transnational Legacy
— Kaley Kramer
- Helen H. Reed and Trevor J. Dadson,
La princesa de Éboli:
Cautiva del rey. Vida de Ana de Mendoza y de la Cerda (1540–1592)
— Núria Silleras-Fernández
- Alison Klairmont Lingo, ed., Stephanie O’Hara,
trans., Louise Bourgeois: Midwife to the Queen of France: Diverse
Observations
— Anne R. Larsen
- Melissa Bailes, Questioning Nature: British
Women’s Scientific Writing and Literary Originality, 1750–1830
— Lisa Forman Cody
- Ania Loomba and Melissa Sanchez, eds., Rethinking
Feminism in Early Modern Studies: Gender, Race, and Sexuality
— Megan Matchinske
- Colette Winn, ed., Nicholas Van Handel, trans., Marguerite
d’Auge, Renée Burlamacchi, and Jeanne du Laurens:
Sin and Salvation in Early Modern France: Three Women’s Stories
— Brigitte Roussel
- Morgan Ring, So High a Blood: The Story of
Margaret Douglas, the Tudor that Time Forgot
— Retha M. Warnicke
- Anna Beer, Sounds and Sweet Airs: The
Forgotten Women of Classical Music
— Cheryll Duncan
- Laura Engel and Elaine McGirr, eds., Stage
Mothers: Women, Work, and the Theater, 1660–1830
— Misty Krueger
- Manon van der Heijden, Women and Crime in
Early Modern Holland
— Mary Lindemann
- Rosie Wyles and Edith Hall, eds.,Women
Classical Scholars: Unsealing the Fountain from the Renaissance to Jacqueline
de Romilly
— Cora Fox
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