Victoria Van Hyning received a Masters in Medieval English Literature from Oxford University and a PhD in Early Modern Literature from the University of Sheffield where she held a British Library co-doctoral award. She held two postdoctoral fellowships at Oxford: a Digital Humanities and Crowdsourcing Fellowship (Zooniverse, Department of Astrophysics), and a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship (Faculty of English and Pembroke). She has published on women's writing, autobiography, early modern Catholicism, and crowdsourcing. Her online humanities crowdsourcing interest has led her to relocate to the USA where she serves as a Senior Innovation Specialist at the Library of Congress.
This book should be welcomed by those whose own interests lie
beyond the spheres of Catholic history and women's writing. The
book was undoubtedly framed with a broad readership in mind.
Indeed, the author at all times assists in making it as accessible
as possible to those unfamiliar with the topic.
*Cormac Begadon, Journal of Ecclesiastical History*
Readers will also value the glossary of conventual terms, the
painstakingly detailed index and the fulsome bibliography, all of
which are in keeping with the rigorous and methodical work offered
in this study of conventual texts through the lens of autobiography
studies.
*Laurence Lux-Sterritt, Journal of Religious History*
One of the most impressive aspects of Van Hyning's findings is her
ability to isolate what she refers to as "acts of self-betrayal"
(32), or moments where an individual nun inadvertently reveals
facts about her own identity. When combined with palaeographic
observations, manuscript analysis, and prosopographical data, Van
Hyning convincingly identifies individual nuns as authors, often
for the first time.
*Liam Peter Temple, Church History*
Convent Autobiography is a major contribution to criticism on early
modern Catholicism, and it belongs on the bookshelves of scholars
interested in autobiography, the convents abroad, cloistered
writing, and monastic history. Van Hyning's intrepid detective work
and ground-breaking treatment of autobiography will open up
valuable new terrain for anyone specializing in history, literary
studies, religious studies, and women's studies.
*Jaime Goodrich, Wayne State University, British Cathlic
History*
Convent Autobiography: Early Modern English Nuns in
Exile,...enables a contemporary reader to envision more fully the
convent as a space in which women's textual engagement and
production thrived.
*Tonya J. Moutray, Journal of British Studies *
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