This book examines how early Stuart queens navigated their roles as political players and artistic patrons in a culture deeply conflicted about the legitimacy of female authority. Anna of Denmark and Henrietta Maria both employed powerful female archetypes such as Amazons and the Virgin Mary in court performances. Susan Dunn-Hensley analyzes how darker images of usurping, contaminating women, epitomized by the witch, often merged with these celebratory depictions. By tracing these competing representations through the Jacobean and Caroline periods, Dunn-Hensley peels back layers of misogyny from historical scholarship and points to rich new lines of inquiry. Few have written about Anna’s religious beliefs, and comparing her Catholicism with Henrietta Maria’s illuminates the ways in which both women were politically subversive. This book offers an important corrective to centuries of negative representation, and contributes to a fuller understanding of the role of queenship in the English Civil War and the fall of the Stuart monarchy.
Tabella dei contenuti
1. Introduction.- 2. Anna of Denmark and Henrietta Maria: Catholic Queens in a Protestant Land.- 3. Witches and Queens: Queen Anna and Representations of Female Power.- 4. Performing Power: Gender, Authority, and Catholicism in Anna’s English Masques.- 5. Finding Anna: Anna’s Influence on Early Jacobean Theatre and Her Legacy.- 6. Henrietta Maria: The Esther to Her Oppressed People. 7. Envisioning a Catholic Utopia:
The Faithful Shepherdess and
The Shepherd’s Paradise.- 8.
Salmacida Spolia: The Last Masque of the Caroline Period and the English Civil War.
Circa l’autore
Susan Dunn-Hensley is a Visiting Assistant Professor at Wheaton College, USA. Her essays on queenship and the sacred feminine appear in “High and Mighty Queens” of Early Modern England (Palgrave 2003) and in Walsingham in Literature and Culture from the Middle Ages to Modernity (2010).