Writing Gender in Women's Letter Collections of the Italian RenaissanceMeredith K. Ray|University of Toronto Press eBooks|2009 Ray's study includes extensive new archival research and highlights a widespread interest in women's letter collections during the Italian Renaissance that suggests a deep curiosity about the female experience and a surprising openness to women's participation in this kind of literary production.
Daughters of AlchemyMeredith K. Ray|Harvard University Press eBooks|2015 Meredith Ray shows that women were at the vanguard of empirical culture during the Scientific Revolution. They experimented with medicine and alchemy at home and in court, debated cosmological discoveries in salons and academies, and in their writings used their knowledge of natural philosophy to argue for women's intellectual equality to men.
Daughters of Alchemy: Women and Scientific Culture in Early Modern ItalyMeredith K. Ray, Valeria Finucci|Renaissance and Reformation|2016 Ray, Meredith K. Daughters of Alchemy: Women and Scientific Culture in Early Modern Italy. An article from journal Renaissance and Reformation / Renaissance et Réforme (Sex Acts in the Early Modern World), on Érudit.
Margherita Sarrocchi's Letters to GalileoMeredith K. Ray|Palgrave Macmillan US eBooks|2016 This book examines a pivotal moment in the history of science and women’s place in it. Meredith Ray offers the first in-depth study and complete English translation of the fascinating correspondence b
Textual Collaboration and Spiritual Partnership in Sixteenth-Century Italy: The Case of Ortensio Lando and Lucrezia GonzagaMeredith K. Ray|Renaissance Quarterly|2009 Abstract The sixteenth-century writer Ortensio Lando (ca. 1512–ca. 1553) wrote many of his works pseudonymously and borrowed liberally from the works of others. Part of a community of professional writers who experimented with collaborative modes of literary production, Lando was also deeply invested in the currents of religious reform that swept through sixteenth-century Italy. In his extensive literary recourse to female personas, Lando privileged contemporary women who shared his own heterodox religious views. This essay examines Lando's female impersonations with particular attention to his use of Lucrezia Gonzaga da Gazzuolo (ca. 1521–76), whose complex literary relationship with Lando is illustrated by her presence throughout his literary corpus, and by his role in the book of Lettere published under her name. It argues that the relationship between these two figures can be best understood as a literary and spiritual partnership, one that meshed Lando's editorial expertise with Gonzaga's fame as a woman of extraordinary virtue and spiritual authority, a reputation that Lando himself helped to create. In an era when print publication by women was still far from common, such collaboration constituted an alternative path to literary expression.