Forthcoming Issue

Eighteenth-Century Women and English Catholicism

Articles

Eighteenth-Century Women and English Catholicism: An Overview
Anna Battigelli & Laura Stevens

Neither Single nor Alone: Elizabeth Cellier, Catholic Community, and Transformations of Catholic Women’s Piety
Lisa McClain

Catherine Trotter and the Claims of Conscience
Joanne E. Myers

Of Her Making: The Cultural Practice of Mary, 9th Duchess of Norfolk
Clare Haynes

“A Distribution of Tyme”: A Study of Reading and Writing Practices in the English Convents in Exile
Caroline Bowden

“All the World Have Heard of the Devil and the Pope”: Elizabeth Inchbald’s The Mogul Tale and English Catholic Satire
Michael Tomko

Regina Maria Roche’s The Children of the Abbey: Contesting the Catholic Presence in Female Gothic Fiction
Diane Hoeveler

“Penance and Mortification For Ever”: Jane Austen and the Ambient Noise of Catholicism
Beth Kowaleski Wallace

Archives

Jane Barker’s Catholic Poems: An Edition of Magdalen MS Part 1: “Poems Referring to the Times”
Bridget Keegan

Innovations

Using Digital Resources for the Study of English Catholic Women Writers
Victoria Van Hyning

Afterword

Frances Dolan

Mary Wollstonecraft Sojourner Truth Margaret Atwood Abigail Adams Amy Tan H.D. Simone de Beauvoir Zora Neale Hurston Frances Burney Virginia Woolf

"The white saxifrage with the indented leafe is moste commended for the breakinge of the Stone."

— Turner, Herbal, III, 68 [1568]