catholicism, gender and seventeenth-century print culture
- Categories
- Book/Boek
- Creator
- Dolan, Frances E.
- Publish Year
- 2005
- Shelfmark
- GR BR 8 2005
- Thesaurus
- rooms-katholicisme, protestantisme, recht, literatuur, 17e eeuw, Verenigd Koninkrijk
- Description
- In the seventeenth century, the largely Protestant nation of England was preoccupied with its Catholic subjects. They inspired more prolific and harsher criticism and more elaborate attempts at legal regulation than did any other minority group. To understand this phenomenon, Frances E. Dolan probes the verbal and visual representations of Catholics and Catholicism and the uses to which these were put during three crises in Protestant-Catholic relations: the gunpowder plot (1605), Queen Henrietta Maria's open advocacy of Catholicism in the 1630s and 1640s, and the popish and meal tub plots (1678-1680). She uses each crisis as a jumping-off point, an opportunity for speculation, as did contemporary writers. Drawing on political and legal writings and offering fresh readings of literary texts such as Macbeth and Antony and Cleopatra, Dolan shows how often Catholics and Catholicism were linked to disorderly women