Women in Exile in Early Modern Europe and the Americas
By (Author) Linda Levy Peck
Edited by Adrianna E. Bakos
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
7th August 2024
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Migration, immigration and emigration
Gender studies: women and girls
305.48414
Hardback
264
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Exile, its pain and possibility, is the starting point of this book. Womens experience of exile was often different from that of men, yet it has not received the important attention it deserves. Women in exile in early modern Europe and the Americas addresses that lacuna through a wide-ranging geographical, chronological, social and cultural approach. Whether powerful, well-to-do or impoverished, exiled by force or choice, every woman faced the question of how to reconstruct her life in a new place. These essays focus on womens agency despite the pressures created by political, economic and social dislocation. Collectively, they demonstrate how these women from different countries, continents and status groups not only survived but also in many cases thrived. This analysis of early modern womens experiences not only provides a new vantage point from which to enrich the study of exile but also contributes important new scholarship to the history of women.
Linda Levy Peck is a Professor of History Emerita at George Washington University
Adrianna E. Bakos is an Associate Professor of History at the University of the Fraser Valley