Contingent Privacies: Knowledge Production and Gender Expectations from 1500 to 1800

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This epilogue presents the main insights from Women’s Private
Practices of Knowledge Production in Early Modern Europe, demonstrating
the key ways in which privacy factored into women’s knowledge-making
practices. The chapter highlights women’s strategies of publicizing the
private as a knowledge-sharing strategy, the role of the home in knowledgemaking in the early modern period, and the limitations and affordances of
navigating knowledge-production processes in a female body. Moreover,
this contribution emphasizes privacy as a malleable, contingent, and continuous negotiation, not necessarily respected by default, but that enabled
women to balance gendered expectations and knowledge pursuits.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TitelWomen's Private Practices of Knowledge Production in Early Modern Europe
RedaktørerNatacha Klein Kafer, Natalia da Silva Perez
Antal sider9
ForlagPalgrave Macmillan
Publikationsdato2024
Sider129-137
ISBN (Trykt)978-3-031-44730-3
ISBN (Elektronisk)978-3-031-44731-0
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2024

ID: 348204274