Evangelizing Korean Women and Gender in the Early Modern World
The Power of Body and Text
Abstract
This monograph examines how Korean women and men came to engage with Catholic missions during Europe’s late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, a profoundly volatile period in East Asian history during which political, cultural, and social disruption created opportunities for new interactions in the region. It analyzes the nature of that engagement, as women and men became both subjects for, and agents of, catechizing practices. As their evangelization, experience of faith, proselytizing, and suffering were recorded in mission archives, the monograph explores contact between Catholic Christianity and Korean women in particular. Broomhall demonstrates how gender ideologies shaped interactions between missionary men and Korean women, and how women’s experiences would come to be narrated, circulated, and memorialized.
Keywords
Jesuit missions; gender; agency; material culture; cultural encounters; KoreaDOI
10.17302/GP-9781641893671ISBN
9781641893664, 9781641893671Publisher
Arc Humanities PressPublisher website
https://arc-humanities.org/Publication date and place
2023Series
Gender and Power in the Premodern World,Classification
Korean
Gender studies: women
Gender studies: men
History