
Contents
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Sixteenth-Century Descriptions and Critiques Sixteenth-Century Descriptions and Critiques
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Seventeenth-Century Descriptions and Critiques Seventeenth-Century Descriptions and Critiques
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Eighteenth-Century Descriptions and Critiques Eighteenth-Century Descriptions and Critiques
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Nineteenth-Century Enshrinement of the All-Women Paradigm Nineteenth-Century Enshrinement of the All-Women Paradigm
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Scholarship: The 1990s Scholarship: The 1990s
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2 Literary and Historiographical Contexts
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Published:July 2011
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Abstract
This chapter traces the concept of forced monachization through treatments in imaginative literature from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries and then in historical writing. It shows how the incorrect assumption that only women were coerced into religious life developed, solidified, and has remained in place until the present day. The overwhelming predominance of women in literary treatments of forced monachization can be explained by the social and legal subordination of women over a very longue durée, one that began to end only in the twentieth century and remains far from complete. Since women—once universally considered to be physically, intellectually, morally, and legally weak—could be presented as much more plausible victims than men, they made excellent tragic heroines.
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