Veiling 348 Europe, General History of
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WOMEN'S STUDIES -- KING, M.L. & A. RABIL, eds. The other voice in early modern Europe. (Chicago series). 1996-2010. 56 vols. of the series. Owrps.

In early modern Europe (about 1400 to about 1700), women began to write and sometimes publish in their native languages, and their writing established the presence of female voices for the first time in world history. They wrote in many genres (dialogues, essays, letters, plays, poems, treatises) and in their native languages—Dutch, English, French, German, Italian, Latin, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Scandinavian, and Spanish. At the same time, they pressed for a wider recognition of women’s intellectual and moral capacities, a campaign in which they were joined by a few male advocates and defenders.

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