Debating Women, Politics, and Power in Early Modern Europe.
Levin, Carole
Sharon L. Jansen. Debating Women, Politics, and Power in Early
Modern Europe.
New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. x + 260 pp. index. bibl.
$79.95. ISBN: 978-0-230-60552-7.
Sharon Jansen is a historian who has published a number of fine
books, including Dangerous Talk and Strange Behavior: Women and Popular
Resistance to the Reforms of Henry VIII and, of particular interest to
this review, The Monstrous Regiment of Women: Female Rulers in Early
Modern Europe, a book that examined the strong women who ruled in a
variety of fashions, as regnant or regent. She begins her current book,
Debating Women, describing being in the British Library in 1996 doing
research on her Monstrous Regiment book. For background she read widely
on the debate about nature and ability in the early modern period. More
than a decade later, as Hillary Clinton began her run for the presidency
and people today began to wonder about the question of could a woman
rule, Jansen decided to go back to that research and write a book that
centered on the gynecocracy debate and what it meant for questions of
politics and power in early modern Europe. As she points out, though
John Knox wrote his First Blast of the Trumpet against the Monstrous
Regiment of Women centuries ago, people today still debate the question
of women and power.
Jansen begins her study with a chapter on Knox, who considered
himself one of "God's messenger[s]" in the Blast he wrote
against women's rule, particularly Mary I, Mary of Guise, and Mary
Stuart. Knox used examples from the Old and New Testaments to
demonstrate the wickedness and madness of women and how disastrous the
rule of women would be, that it is against natural law, divine law, and
civil law. Jansen asks the important questions, what did Knox hope for
when he published his Blast, and whom did he hope replace the queens?
Unlike some Protestants, Knox was not only against Catholic women
rulers, but all women rulers.
After the discussion of Knox, Jansen moves on to those who early in
the reign of Elizabeth I responded to Knox. Some, such as John Aylmer,
have been often analyzed by modern critics, but others, such as Richard
Bertie--who would have interesting ideas about powerful women since he
was the second husband of Catherine Willoughby, Dowager Duchess of
Suffolk (a man she had married out of love and respect and shared
religious belief, since he was far below her in status)--have not. As
Jansen points out, Bertie's response is especially significant in
refuting Knox about women's legal status. She also examines the
manuscript response by Henry Howard, written much later in
Elizabeth's reign. Jansen argues, I believe correctly, that even
the most ardent defenders of women's rule are in some ways
ambivalent.
One of the great strengths of Jansen's study is her putting
this sixteenth-century debate within a larger context. She examines the
early histories of women that discussed the subject of women rulers. Her
discussions of Boccaccio's Famous Women, Arienti's Ginevra,
concerning Famous Women, Strozzi's Defense of Women,
Equicoal's Concerning Women, and Agrippa's On the Nobility and
Preeminence of the Female Sex are all very useful. She then uses these
texts to discuss works closer in chronology to Knox, such as
Vives's The Instruction of a Christian Woman.
Jansen's next chapter is in some ways the most welcoming of
all. She presents the women's voices in the debate, beginning with
Christine de Pizan. She then moves to a number of significant but less
well-known women writers, such as Isotta Nogarola, Laura Cereta, and
Louise Labe. Jansen carefully analyzes their responses to the male
authors she has already discussed. Some of the most interesting texts
are ones responding to Guiseppi Passi's The Defects of Women.
"Moderata Fonte," which was the pseudonym of Modesta Pozzo,
actually composed her manuscript before Passi's was published. Hers
was published after her death, however, in response to it. Another
specifically in response to Passi was Lucrezia Marinella's The
Nobility and Excellence of Women and the Defects and Vices of Men, which
again related the history of learned and illustrious women. Jansen ends
her study with a brief chapter on queens and controversy in the early
modern period and shows that by the late seventeenth century women were
no longer ruling.
Since Jansen worked in the British Library in 1996 there have been
many wonderful studies on early modern intellectual debates on women,
women writers, and queens. Some of the material of this book is more
widely known now than a decade ago. Jansen's book is beautifully
written and accessible not only to scholars but to a general readership.
Its greatest use would be to students, so we can only hope that an
affordable paperback edition becomes available.
CAROLE LEVIN
University of Nebraska