Visionary Women: Ecstatic Prophecy in Seventeenth-Century EnglandThis study of radical prophecy in 17th-century England explores the significance of gender for religious visionaries between 1650 and 1700. Phyllis Mack focuses on the Society of Friends, or Quakers, the largest radical sectarian group active during the English Civil War and Interregnum. The meeting records, correspondence, almanacs, autobiographical and religious writings left by the early Quakers enable Mack to present a textured portrait of their evolving spirituality. Parallel sources on men and women provide a unique opportunity to pose theoretical questions about the meaning of gender, such as whether a "women's spirituality" can be identified, or whether religious women are more or less emotional than men. |
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Page 8
... accounts of dreams , and autobiographical jour- nals , Quakers and others recorded their attempts to apply the acid of self - criticism , fasting , and incessant prayer to their own bodies and personalities ; to dissolve the habits ...
... accounts of dreams , and autobiographical jour- nals , Quakers and others recorded their attempts to apply the acid of self - criticism , fasting , and incessant prayer to their own bodies and personalities ; to dissolve the habits ...
Page 33
... account of John Ley , who counseled Mrs. Jane Ratcliffe during and after her conversion . Com- paring her godliness to his own , he wrote " great heat of devotion if with little light of information in the lady ( but in her truly there ...
... account of John Ley , who counseled Mrs. Jane Ratcliffe during and after her conversion . Com- paring her godliness to his own , he wrote " great heat of devotion if with little light of information in the lady ( but in her truly there ...
Page 34
... accounts of such visionaries , published in cheap popular format by relatives , ministers , and magis- trates , was not the mythic hero or shaman's lonely adventure of self- transcendence ; it was illness and self - annihilation ...
... accounts of such visionaries , published in cheap popular format by relatives , ministers , and magis- trates , was not the mythic hero or shaman's lonely adventure of self- transcendence ; it was illness and self - annihilation ...
Page 39
... accounts of monstrous births and the moral message associated with them are reprinted in Hydcr Edward Rollins , The ... Account of a Child Born at Furbick in Darbyshire , the 19th of January 1694 , with a Top - knot & Rowle on Its Head ...
... accounts of monstrous births and the moral message associated with them are reprinted in Hydcr Edward Rollins , The ... Account of a Child Born at Furbick in Darbyshire , the 19th of January 1694 , with a Top - knot & Rowle on Its Head ...
Page 42
... account was published and signed by ten town officials , who saw the monstrous birth as proof that she had given birth to a devil.75 ( If Mary Adams had managed to attract a more sympathetic audience , they might well have interpreted ...
... account was published and signed by ten town officials , who saw the monstrous birth as proof that she had given birth to a devil.75 ( If Mary Adams had managed to attract a more sympathetic audience , they might well have interpreted ...
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Abiezer Coppe Ann Audland Anna Trapnel authority behavior biblical body Book Bristol Cambridge child Christ Christopher Hill church culture divine Early Quaker Edward Burrough Eleanor Davies Elizabeth Hooton England English Epistle feminine Fifth Monarchist Fox's Francis Howgill gender George Fox Gerrard Winstanley hath heart Howgill husband Ibid James Nayler Jane Joan John Perrot Katherine Lady Eleanor Lancashire letter Library London Lord magistrates male Margaret Fell marriage Martha Simmonds men's meeting minister Monthly Meeting mother in Israel movement mystical political Portfolio Manuscripts preaching prison prophecy Puritan Quaker women Quarterly Meeting quoted radical Ranters Rebeckah Travers religious reprinted Richard Sarah servants Seventeenth-Century social Society of Friends soul speak spiritual suffering symbolism testimony thee things Thomas thou traveled truth University Press unto vision wife William Caton William Penn Winstanley witch witchcraft woman women Friends women prophets women's meeting words writings wrote York Yorkshire