Review "In this gem of a book, Mary Peckham Magray presents an impassioned, well-argued case for the role of Catholic women's orders in the Irish devotional revolution of the 19th century...Magray's book will appeal to students of Irish Catholicism, women's religious orders, and missionary movements in relation to colonialism."--Journal of Ritual Studies"This book constitutes an outstanding intervention in the history of both Irish Catholicism and Irish women."--Kevin Whelan, Notre Dame University, Dublin Center"A tour de force of social and cultural history. Mary Peckham Magray's The Transforming Power of the Nuns offers exciting new evidence for what scholars of Catholic women religious have come to realize--that nuns played a pivotal role in the devotional and educational revolutions of nineteenth-century Ireland. The reverberations of their impressive achievement were also felt wherever Irish people migrated after the Great Famine. Historians of women and religion in Ireland and the United States, as well as in England , Canada, and Australia, will now want to examine even further the lives and work of these influential Catholic women."--Suellen Hoy, University of Notre Dame"Mary Peckham Magray challenges much of the conventional wisdom about Irish female religious in the nineteenth century...This study contends that the cultural revolution in Catholic Ireland was spearheaded by the work of women religious who had been steadily ingratiating themselves into the everyday lives of the Catholic masses in Ireland in the late 18th century through their social welfare, health care, and educational activities. This study demonstrates that these women were social activists who vociferously and successfully resisted the efforts of the male hierarchy to take their independence from them."--Janet Nolan, Loyola University, Chicago"We are grateful for the rich details Magray provides to amplify our knowledge...By carefully describing this 19th-century revolutionary phenomenon among Irish women religious, Magray provides an important challange."--Review for Religious"Magray's thesis is...complex and challenging, for she does examine the role the orders had on reshaping the Roman Catholic church in Ireland...[It] enrich[es] the separate fields of religious history and women's history, but also bring[s] them together."--Victorian Studies"[T]his volume is a pleasure to read: It boasts first-class production values; it is well written and edited; it has a good index and bibliography; and, most important, it touches on several important aspects of Irish history in the modern era."--Journal of Interdisciplinary History Read more About the Author Mary Peckham Magray is Assistant Professor of History at Wesleyan College. Read more
S**R
Women to the fore.
An important study of the middle class leaership in nineteenth century Irish women's religious life. It casts much light on other nations history in the same period. Highly recommended.
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