The Problems of Female Rule in English History
De som köpt den här boken har ofta också köpt Who's Afraid of Gender? av Judith Butler (inbunden).
Köp båda 2 för 1112 kr"Highly readable, engaging, and enlightening. One might even consider reading this book purely for pleasure." - The American Historical Review"This study helpfully puts the spotlight on queenship over the longue dure, providing welcome new avenues for research by transcending the boundaries of individual reigns." - Journal of British Studies"There is much to admire about this book. Beem successfully combines traditional political history with gender analysis . . . This is a worthy study of the art of kingly queenship." - Canadian Journal of History"Charles Beem has written a stimulating series of case-studies on female regnal power . . . his conceptual clarity and well-crafted review of four historiographies sheds useful light on issues of gender and power." - Clarissa Campbell Orr, Archives: The Journal of the British Records Association"Thoughtful and thorough . . . Beem admirably situtates his study both within the fields of women's studies and political history, exploring thesewomen's reigns for what they contribute to our understanding of women's positions and the political situation of the time." - Medieval Feminist Forum"The Lioness Roared is a novel and important study of the meaning of 'kingship,' adding as much to our appreciation of the social and political constructs of gender as to our understanding of the problems specific to female rule. Other scholars have investigated individual instances of women on the throne, but none as comprehensively as Charles Beem s treatment of the rule of British queens from Matilda to Victoria." - Howard Nenner, Smith College"Charles Beem examines the queens of England and demonstrates that Elizabeth I was not the only strong and fascinating woman to rule as consort or regnant. With many examples from the medieval period onward, this thoroughly researched and beautifully written study should find a wide and enthusiastic readership." - Carole Levin, Willa Cather Professor of History, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Professor of History, University of North Carolina, Pembroke, USA.
Introduction: The Lioness Roared Making a Name for Herself: The Empress Matilda and the Construction of Female Lordship in Twelfth Century England Her Kingdom's Wife: Mary I and the Gender of Regal Power "I Am Her Majesty's Subject": Queen Anne, Prince George of Denmark, and the Transformation of the English Male Consort "What Power Have I Left?": Queen Victoria's Bedchamber Crisis Revisted Does the Lioness Still Roar?