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Escaped Nuns

True Womanhood and the Campaign Against Convents in Antebellum America

Cassandra L. (Postdoctoral Teaching Fellow, Department of History, Postdoctoral Teaching Fellow, Department of History, University of Missouri, Columbia) Yacovazzi

Escaped Nuns

Escaped Nuns

True Womanhood and the Campaign Against Convents in Antebellum America

Escaped Nuns

 

On the eve of the Civil War, Awful Disclosures of the Hotel Dieu, a convent exposé by a fraudulent "escaped nun" Maria Monk, captivated readers. The book served as a centerpiece for a larger campaign against convents, marked by riots, propaganda, and nativist politics, and reflected deep concerns regarding women, religious life, and the fate of the Republic.


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Beschrijving Escaped Nuns

Just five weeks after its publication in January 1836, Awful Disclosures of the Hotel Dieu Nunnery, billed as an escaped nun's shocking exposé of convent life, had already sold more than 20,000 copies. The book detailed gothic-style horror stories of licentious priests and abusive mothers superior, tortured nuns and novices, and infanticide. By the time the book was revealed to be a fiction and the author, Maria Monk, an impostor, it had already become one of the nineteenth century's best-selling books. In antebellum America only one book, Uncle Tom's Cabin, outsold it.

The success of Monk's book was no fluke, but rather a part of a larger phenomenon of anti-Catholic propaganda, riots, and nativist politics. The secrecy of convents stood as an oblique justification for suspicion of Catholics and the campaign against them, which was intimately connected with cultural concerns regarding reform, religion, immigration, and, in particular, the role of women in the Republic. At a time when the term "female virtue" pervaded popular rhetoric, the image of the veiled nun represented a threat to the established American ideal of womanhood. Unable to marry, she was instead a captive of a foreign foe, a fallen woman, a white slave, and a foolish virgin. In the first half of the nineteenth century, ministers, vigilantes, politicians, and writers--male and female--forged this image of the nun, locking arms against convents. The result was a far-reaching antebellum movement that would shape perceptions of nuns, and women more broadly, in America.


ISBN
9780190881009
Pagina's
232
Verschenen
NUR
681
Druk
1
Uitvoering
Hardback
Taal
Engels
Uitgever
OUP USA

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