Margaret Arnold is Rector of St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church in Cohasett, Massachusetts. She received her Ph.D. in Religious and Theological Studies from Boston University and was awarded the 2017 Duke Divinity Innovation Grant for the development of Episcopal curriculum material. She has written about faith and women’s lives in the work of Jane Austen and L. M. Montgomery for the literary website sarahemsley.com.
Arnold presents a meticulously researched account of the figure of
the Magdalene as late-medieval piety gave way to the age of
reform.
*New York Review of Books*
Arnold poses important questions about the roles of women in the
Reformation and the ways in which Mary Magdalene was appropriated
as a model. Indeed, the diverse ways in which Mary was a source of
spiritual authority, enabling female writers to explore a range of
crucial issues, is one of the book’s most significant
contributions. The analysis is crisp and insightful, and Arnold has
a sharp eye for continuities and change.
*Bruce Gordon, Yale Divinity School*
The Magdalene in the Reformation considers all aspects of this
formidable New Testament figure across both Protestant and Catholic
Reformations. As she traces women writers and religious activists
who used Mary Magdalene to explore their own relationship to
Christianity, Arnold convincingly demonstrates the important role
Mary played for women regardless of their confessional
persuasion.
*Jane Tylus, Yale University*
Promises to change our understanding of Reformation history and
women’s place in it. Rather than a simple loss or win for women,
the Reformation depicted here is filled with ambivalence, conflict,
and negotiation when it comes to women’s roles. Arnold shows the
Magdalene was a powerful figure for debating contemporary issues
for women in the church, state, and family.
*Melissa Sanchez, University of Pennsylvania*
Scholars interested in the evolving character of the Biblical Mary
will relish Arnold’s lucid text.
*Publishers Weekly*
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