Spirituality, Gender, and the Self in Renaissance Italy: Angela Merici and the Company of St. Ursula (1474-1540).
Schutte, Anne Jacobson
Querciolo Mazzonis. Spirituality, Gender, and the Self in
Renaissance Italy: Angela Merici and the Company of St. Ursula
(1474-1540).
Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America Press, 2007.
xviii + 248 pp. index. bibl. $35.95. ISBN: 978-0-8132-1490-0.
A native of Desenzano del Garda, Merici was born in 1474 into a
minor noble family whose patriarch traded in wool. After their
parents' death, she and her younger brother moved to the home of an
uncle in Salo, where she became a Franciscan Tertiary. In 1535, two
decades after relocating in Brescia, she established the Company of St.
Ursula, a non-cloistered religious order for women. The institute gained
papal recognition in 1544, four years after the death of the founder,
who was beatified in 1768 and canonized in 1807. Until now, virtually
all studies of St. Angela have been produced in house, that is, by
Ursulines. The appearance of a study by a secular scholar whose purpose
is not hagiographical, therefore, raises high expectations.
This book, a revised version of the author's doctoral
dissertation (University of London, 2000), accomplishes one important
task. Mazzonis puts to rest the universally held assumption that from
the beginning, the Company of St. Ursula was a teaching institute.
Although it eventually became one, Merici herself did not
envision--indeed, she said not a word about--an educational mission.
During her lifetime, members of the company lived on their own incomes
or earned their keep in jobs unrelated to teaching. Many readers will
recall John O'Malley's demonstration that running schools, a
vocation the Jesuits eventually took up, played no part in Ignatius
Loyola and his companions' early plans for the Society of Jesus.
This parallel evidently did not occur to Mazzonis, nor does he speculate
about the possibility that something besides simple backward projection
may have contributed to the misunderstanding--or perhaps deliberate
misrepresentation--of Ursuline origins.
In other respects, the book is disappointing. Sometimes Mazzonis
neglects to pursue what would seem to be obvious lines of analysis. He
notes repeatedly, for instance, that Merici called members of the
company brides of Christ, a time-honored term for cloistered religious.
Gabriella Zarri has shown that the nuptial metaphor attained concrete
embodiment in nuns' ceremonies of profession. Until a quarter of a
century after Merici's death, Ursulines did not profess vows.
During the founder's lifetime, was bride of Christ more than a
conventional expression bereft of ritual consequences? Mazzonis does not
address this question.
Another shortcoming of this study is the author's vague,
general likening of Merici and the Company of St. Ursula to other
currents in their past and present. Let me adduce two examples. Mazzonis
suggests that previous groups of semi-religious women--the beguines, the
bizzoche or pinzochere, and (until the 1560s) the tertiaries--lie
somewhere in the background of Merici's institute, but he does not
specify how or where. Did she unconsciously imitate or choose
consciously to improve upon these styles of life? Did her contemporaries
note the similarities and differences between them? I looked in vain for
a precise, historically specific characterization of the relationship.
Although Mazzonis twice cites Zarri's essay "The Third
Status," he neither endorses nor tries to refute its main argument:
that "only in the sixteenth century ... did these alternative forms
of female religious life acquire distinct configurations responding to
the new circumstances" (in Time, Space, and Women's Lives in
Early Modern Europe, ed. Anne Jacobson Schutte, Thomas Kuehn, and
Silvana Seidel Menchi [2001], 182).
The same holds true for Mazzonis's treatment of his
protagonist and spiritual trends of her time, which appear in the
movement of the Observance in mendicant orders beginning in the
fifteenth century, among some humanists, and in the new congregations
and confraternities established in the sixteenth century. After stating
correctly that these groups "can no longer be easily seen as a
composite movement" (138), that is exactly what he proceeds to do.
Figures as different as Erasmus and Battista da Crema are shoehorned
into a single group that emphasized "individuality, interiority,
and morality." Merici's foundation, he claims,
"represents a radical and institutional synthesis of this spiritual
trend" (153).
Mazzonis ventures unnecessarily into the territory of mysticism,
the technical vocabulary of which he has not mastered. Union does not
mean submitting to God's will, a necessity that Merici (like every
good Christian) emphasized. Rather, it connotes the final stage of a
process in which human faculties cease to operate and a person is
entirely subsumed in the divine. Though undoubtedly spiritual, Merici
does not fit into the same universe of discourse as Teresa of Avila.
Toward the end, Mazzonis takes another futile step: trying to show that
she contributed to modern conceptions of the self, individualism, and
personhood. Alas, a solid modern study of Angela Merici and the Company
of St. Ursula remains to be written.
ANNE JACOBSON SCHUTTE
University of Virginia, Emerita