A Veil of Silence: Women and Sound in Renaissance Italy

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Product Details
Price
$55.00
Publisher
Harvard University Press
Publish Date
Pages
256
Dimensions
6.47 X 9.5 X 0.96 inches | 1.25 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780674295810

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About the Author
Julia Rombough is Assistant Professor of History at Acadia University.
Reviews
In this original and deftly argued study, Rombough meticulously traces the acoustic strategies that Florentine authorities used to regulate and discipline cloistered women. Synthesizing a wide range of archival sources, she exposes the legal, moral, and economic contradictions at work in policing the auditory world of girls and women--while also revealing the ways in which they resisted these efforts through the sound of their own voices. Deeply engaged with current scholarship on sound and the senses, this book will also be a welcome addition for those interested in early modern histories of women, the church, architecture, and urban space.--Niall Atkinson, author of The Noisy Renaissance: Sound, Architecture, and Florentine Urban Life
This book makes a significant contribution to the emerging field of sonic history, as well as the voluminous scholarship in convent studies. Focusing on authorities' attempts to curate disciplined soundscapes, Rombough shows how 'sonic reform' was central to the post-Tridentine project of subjecting women to strict enclosure. And yet, many women took to laughter, singing, and chatting as a form of resistance against these oppressive norms. Likewise, urban noise--the laughter of prostitutes, the racket of youths, and the howling of drunkards--could not but reach their ears. Rombough brings to life an important part of the lived experience of early modern women.--Jutta Gisela Sperling, author of Convents and the Body Politic in Late Renaissance Venice
A Veil of Silence takes us into the rich sonic worlds of female enclosures--nunneries, charity homes, reform houses--in late Renaissance Florence. Rombough skillfully reconstructs the purifying regimes of silence, the sonic intrusions of sex work, and the rowdy sociability of male youths to illuminate how and why sound mattered to the health and governance of these communities. An original, imaginative study that captures the gendered nature of sensorial experience in Italian Renaissance cities.--Sharon Strocchia, author of Forgotten Healers: Women and the Pursuit of Health in Late Renaissance Italy
A meticulous and valuable study of cloistered women in Renaissance Italy, where the discordant sounds of the street punctuated regimes of quiet piety in convents, charity homes, and reformatories. Rombough listens carefully to both distant echoes and confined whispers, showing how the rhythms of life outside disrupted, shocked, and amused those within the walls of these institutions. In so doing, she deftly draws our attention to the sounds of conflicting lifestyles, hopes, and expectations.--Emily Cockayne, author of Hubbub: Filth, Noise, and Stench in England, 1600-1770