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Convent networks in Early Modern Italy / edited by Marilyn Dunn and Saundra Weddle.
Van Pelt Library BX4220.I8 C658 2020
Available
- Format:
- Book
- Series:
- Europa sacra ; 2030-3068 v. 25.
- Europa Sacra (ES), 2030-3068 ; volume 25.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Convents--Italy--History--16th century.
- Convents.
- Monastic and religious life of women--Italy--History--16th century.
- Monastic and religious life of women.
- Augustinian nuns--Italy--History--16th century.
- Augustinian nuns.
- Christian art and symbolism--Italy--16th century.
- Christian art and symbolism.
- History.
- Italy.
- Physical Description:
- 350 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
- Place of Publication:
- Turnhout : Brepols, [2020]
- Summary:
- "The walls of early modern convents suggested the existence of absolute conditions that seldom existed in reality. While the built enclosure communicated the convent's isolation from the world outside, connections between women religious and individuals or groups outside their communities extended into and from these houses, with each constituency exploiting these associations to serve its own aims. Likewise, the walls conveyed the presence of a homogeneous and unified community where, often, differences in status, power, and other interests led to the development of internal alliances and factions. Building on an upsurge of scholarly interest in convent networks that previously has not been focused in a single volume, this collection of interdisciplinary essays examines how and why such associations existed. The collection examines personal, spatial, and temporal networks that emerged in, among, and beyond convents in Italy during the early modern period. These ties were established, cultivated, or even rejected in a variety of ways that influenced nuns' devotional lives, their relationships with patrons, and their cultural engagement and production. These essays cover the time period before and after the Council of Trent, permitting an analysis of convents' responses to changing power dynamics, both inside and outside the enclosure. The book also engages a broad geographical and cultural range, with chapters focusing on the centres of Florence, Venice, and Rome, the courts of Urbino, Ferrara, and Mantua, and smaller cities across Northern Italy, offering unprecedented insights into early modern Italian convent life and its varied forms and modes of expression.The walls of early modern convents suggested the existence of absolute conditions that seldom existed in reality. While the built enclosure communicated the convent's isolation from the world outside, connections between women religious and individuals or groups outside their communities extended into and from these houses, with each constituency exploiting these associations to serve its own aims. Likewise, the walls conveyed the presence of a homogeneous and unified community where, often, differences in status, power, and other interests led to the development of internal alliances and factions. Building on an upsurge of scholarly interest in convent networks that previously has not been focused in a single volume, this collection of interdisciplinary essays examines how and why such associations existed. The collection examines personal, spatial, and temporal networks that emerged in, among, and beyond convents in Italy during the early modern period. These ties were established, cultivated, or even rejected in a variety of ways that influenced nuns' devotional lives, their relationships with patrons, and their cultural engagement and production. These essays cover the time period before and after the Council of Trent, permitting an analysis of convents' responses to changing power dynamics, both inside and outside the enclosure. The book also engages a broad geographical and cultural range, with chapters focusing on the centres of Florence, Venice, and Rome, the courts of Urbino, Ferrara, and Mantua, and smaller cities across Northern Italy, offering unprecedented insights into early modern Italian convent life and its varied forms and modes of expression."-- Back cover.
- Contents:
- Machine generated contents note: Advising Women: Holy Women and Female Advisees in Early Modern Italy / Jennifer A. Cavalli
- Nuns' Networks: Letters from Suor Domenica da Paradiso at La Crocetta in Renaissance Florence / Meghan Callahan
- Pursuing a Savonarolan Thread: Patrons, Painters, and Piagnoni at S. Caterina in Cafaggio / Catherine Turrill Lupi
- Botticini's Saint Monica Altarpiece and the Augustinian Network of Florence's Oltrarno / Laura Llewellyn
- Identity, Alliance, and Reform in Early Modern Venetian Convents / Saundra Weddle
- Entrepreneurship Beyond Convent Walls: The Augustinian Nuns of S. Caterina dei Sacchi in Venice / Ludovica Galeazzo
- Musical Networks and the Early Modern Italian Convent / Kimberlyn Montford
- Family Dynasties and Networks of Alliance in Post-Tridentine Convents in Rome and its Environs / Marilyn Dunn
- Art as a Conduit for Nuns' Networks: The Case of Suor Teresa Berenice ViteUi at S. Apollonia in Florence / Julie James.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- ISBN:
- 9782503586076
- 2503586074
- OCLC:
- 1151894257
- Publisher Number:
- 9782503586076
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