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Daughters of Light
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 422

Daughters of Light

More than a thousand Quaker female ministers were active in the Anglo-American world before the Revolutionary War, when the Society of Friends constituted the colonies' third-largest religious group. Some of these women circulated throughout British North

Quaker Women
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 306

Quaker Women

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2007
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  • Publisher: Routledge

Written by a respected and pioneering historian of women, this book focuses on specific case studies of the lives of individual Quaker women and uses them to introduce key concepts and theories relating to women's lives during this period.

Quaker Women Prophets in England and Wales, 1650-1700
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 284

Quaker Women Prophets in England and Wales, 1650-1700

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2000
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  • Publisher: Unknown

This study covers the formative and troubled years of earliest Quakerism in England and Wales, with some reference to migration to America. Women were active to a remarkable degree in the sects of this time. This volume concentrates on their contribution, and patterns of change in Quaker groups.

New Critical Studies on Early Quaker Women, 1650-1800
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 403

New Critical Studies on Early Quaker Women, 1650-1800

New Critical Studies on Early Quaker Women, 1650—1800 takes a fresh look at archival and printed sources from England and America, elucidating why women were instrumental to the Quaker movement from its inception to its establishment as a transatlantic religious body. This authoritative volume, the first collection to focus entirely on the contributions of women, is a landmark study of their distinctive religious and gendered identities. The chapters connect three richly woven threads of Quaker women's lives—Revolutions, Disruptions and Networks—by tying gendered experience to ruptures in religion across this radical, volatile period of history.

Quaker Women, 1650-1690
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 374

Quaker Women, 1650-1690

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1915
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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Witness, Warning, and Prophecy
  • Language: en

Witness, Warning, and Prophecy

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2018-01-22
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  • Publisher: Iter Press

The forty texts collected in this volume offer a small but representative sample of Quaker women’s tremendous literary output between 1655 and 1700. They include examples of key Quaker literary genres — proclamations, directives, warnings, sufferings, testimonies, polemic, pleas for toleration — and showcase a range of literary styles and voices, from eloquent poetry to legal analyses of English canon and civil law. In their varied responses to the core Quaker belief in the indwelling Spirit, these women left a rich literary legacy of an early countercultural movement. The Other Voice in Early Modern Europe - The Toronto Series: Volume 60

Quaker Women
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 306

Quaker Women

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2012-11-12
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  • Publisher: Routledge

One nineteenth-century commentator noted the ‘public’ character of Quaker women as signalling a new era in female history. This study examines such claims through the story of middle-class women Friends from among the kinship circle created by the marriage in 1839 of Elizabeth Priestman and the future radical Quaker statesman, John Bright. The lives discussed here cover a period from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth centuries, and include several women Friends active in radical politics and the women’s movement, in the service of which they were able to mobilise extensive national and international networks. They also created and preserved a substantial archive of private pap...

Strength in Weakness
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 206

Strength in Weakness

Quaker women in the eighteenth century were carrying on the faith and activity of their seventeenth-century forebears, but as a group their lives and writings have been neglected in modern times by both Quaker and other historians. Gil Skidmore brings together a rich array of letters, spiritual autobiographies, journals, and memoirs to put the lives and concerns of these women into context.

Autobiographical Writings by Early Quaker Women
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 236

Autobiographical Writings by Early Quaker Women

This edition contains substantial excerpts from a range of self-writings by Quaker women, composed between the 1650s and circa 1710: letters, testimonies, memoirs, accounts of spiritual development, narratives of persecution and imprisonment. The texts are freshly edited from manuscripts or first printed editions.In his general introduction the editor, David Booy, sketches the history of the Quaker movement from the 1650s to the early 1700s, and considers the role of female Quakers during the first and second phases of the movement. The introduction also surveys the types and purposes of autobiographical writings produced by female Friends, and relates these writings to key Quaker ideas, concerns and practices regarding the inner light, scripture, testimony, plain speaking, friendship, gender and community.The volume includes a substantial bibliography of primary and secondary materials.

Quaker Women, 1800–1920
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 311

Quaker Women, 1800–1920

This collection investigates the world of nineteenth-century Quaker women, bringing to light the issues and challenges Quaker women experienced and the dynamic ways in which they were active agents of social change, cultural contestation, and gender transgression in the nineteenth century. New research illuminates the complexities of Quaker testimonies of equality, slavery, and peace and how they were informed by questions of gender, race, ethnicity, and culture. The essays in this volume challenge the view that Quaker women were always treated equally with men and that people of color were welcomed into white Quaker activities. The contributors explore how diverse groups of Quaker women nav...