Women of Influence: Gender and Power in European History
MTA
A feminist history of female agency from medieval queens to 20th-century activists
2nd Edition
*Women of Influence: Gender and Power in European History* provides a comprehensive feminist re-examination of European history from the medieval period to the mid-20th century. Moving beyond traditional male-centered narratives of wars and treaties, the book centers on female agency across diverse social strata. It explores how women—from powerful medieval queens and regents like Blanche of Castile and Eleanor of Aquitaine to intellectual trailblazers in convents and Renaissance courts—negotiated authority within patriarchal legal and religious structures. By analyzing "private" spaces such as households, salons, and markets as political arenas, the text demonstrates that women were never passive observers but active protagonists who shaped the continent’s economic, cultural, and political landscape.
The narrative traces the evolution of women's roles through major historical shifts, including the Scientific Revolution, the Enlightenment, and the industrial reordering of society. It highlights the intellectual labor of women like Margaret Cavendish and Emilie du Châtelet in natural philosophy, as well as the economic essentiality of guildswomen, peasant producers, and factory workers. The book particularly emphasizes the tension between institutional constraints—such as the Napoleonic Code and the policing of gender through witchcraft trials—and the creative strategies women employed to bypass them. This includes the development of international feminist networks, the mobilization of the suffrage movement, and the radical activism found within socialist and anarchist circles.
In the twentieth century, the book examines the profound impact of total war on gender roles and the varied experiences of women under both democratic and authoritarian regimes. It documents women's multifaceted contributions to war efforts and their vital participation in resistance movements across occupied Europe, while also acknowledging the gendered traumas of the Holocaust and mass displacement. The concluding chapters reflect on the "afterlives" of these histories, critiquing the traditional archives and institutional biases that have long obscured female contributions. By recovering these voices through a mix of legal records, material culture, and personal correspondence, the book restores the complexity of the past and offers a durable legacy for understanding power through the lens of gender.
This book is ideal for undergraduate and graduate students in history, gender studies, and European studies; scholars researching women's history or feminist historiography; and educated general readers interested in understanding how women shaped European politics, culture, and society from medieval times to the 20th century. It will particularly benefit those seeking a comprehensive, intersectional approach to women's historical agency that moves beyond exceptional figures to examine the experiences of women across different classes, regions, and social contexts.
May 14, 2026
80,282 words
5 hours 37 minutes
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