The Congrégation de Notre-Dame, Superiors, and the Paradox of Power, 1693-1796 (McGill-Queen's Studies in the History of Religion, Series Two, Book 48) by Colleen Gray
English | 2007 | ISBN: 0773532277, 0773532846 | 288 pages | PDF | 3,4 MB
English | 2007 | ISBN: 0773532277, 0773532846 | 288 pages | PDF | 3,4 MB
Gray focuses on the social, administrative, political, and spiritual dimensions of the lives of three Congregation superiors - Marie Barbier, Marie-Josephe Maugue-Garreau, and Marie Raizenne. By exploring the implications of the hierarchies of power within the convent and providing a thorough analysis of the convent's relationship with the social, religious, and governmental structures that surrounded it - taking into account both medieval and Catholic Reformation Europe and seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Canada - Gray reveals the paradoxes inherent in the position of a female superior within the male-dominated sphere of both the church and the larger secular community.
The Congregation de Notre-Dame, Superiors, and the Paradox of Power, 1693-1796 not only reconstructs a vanished world but also provides great insight into the organization of institutional structures and the complex aspects of power within them.