Book contents
- Protestant Empires
- Protestant Empires
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Reworking Reformation in the Early English Atlantic
- 2 Puritanism in a Local Context: Ministry, People, and Church in 1630s Massachusetts
- 3 Learned Reading in the Atlantic Colonies: How Humanist Practices Crossed the Atlantic
- 4 Portable Lives: Reformed Artisans and Refined Materials in the Refugee Atlantic
- 5 Idolatry, Markets, and Confession: The Global Project of the de Bry Family
- 6 “Better the Turk than the Pope”: Calvinist Engagement with Islam in Southeast Asia
- 7 Inventing a Lutheran Ritual: Baptisms of Muslims and Africans in Early Modern Germany
- 8 Conversion and Its Discontents on the Southern Colonial Frontier: The Pietist Encounter with Non-Christians in Colonial Georgia
- 9 Globalizing the Protestant Reformation through Millenarian Practices
- 10 Global Protestant Missions and the Role of Emotions
- 11 The Sacred World of Mary Prince
- 12 New Perspectives on Gender and Sexuality in Global Protestantism, 1500–1800
- Index
12 - New Perspectives on Gender and Sexuality in Global Protestantism, 1500–1800
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 August 2020
- Protestant Empires
- Protestant Empires
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Reworking Reformation in the Early English Atlantic
- 2 Puritanism in a Local Context: Ministry, People, and Church in 1630s Massachusetts
- 3 Learned Reading in the Atlantic Colonies: How Humanist Practices Crossed the Atlantic
- 4 Portable Lives: Reformed Artisans and Refined Materials in the Refugee Atlantic
- 5 Idolatry, Markets, and Confession: The Global Project of the de Bry Family
- 6 “Better the Turk than the Pope”: Calvinist Engagement with Islam in Southeast Asia
- 7 Inventing a Lutheran Ritual: Baptisms of Muslims and Africans in Early Modern Germany
- 8 Conversion and Its Discontents on the Southern Colonial Frontier: The Pietist Encounter with Non-Christians in Colonial Georgia
- 9 Globalizing the Protestant Reformation through Millenarian Practices
- 10 Global Protestant Missions and the Role of Emotions
- 11 The Sacred World of Mary Prince
- 12 New Perspectives on Gender and Sexuality in Global Protestantism, 1500–1800
- Index
Summary
In the 1990s, scholarship increasingly focused on issues of gender and sexuality in Europe and the colonial Americas, though some studies were more global or comparative. New theoretical perspectives and new emphases have since developed, and this essay discusses four of these: First, the “emotional turn” which focuses on emotional communities, in which Protestants figure prominently, as well as emotional genealogies in other cultures. This allows for what global historians call “reciprocal comparison” where each case is viewed from the vantage point of the other. Second, processes of migration and movement that are part of the “spatial turn,” including the creation and critique of the “Atlantic World” as a site of interaction among gender cultures. Third, the “material turn,” which draws on material culture studies to assess the role of objects and the relationships between things and people in the wake of the Reformation and spread of Western Christianity. Fourth, the inclusion of a wider range of actors, including European women and indigenous people, in the processes Christian expansion and the transcultural exchange, blending, indigenization, and hybridity that resulted.
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- Information
- Protestant EmpiresGlobalizing the Reformations, pp. 321 - 347Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020