University Press of America
Pages: 460
Trim: 6⅛ x 9¼
978-0-7618-4342-9 • Paperback • April 2010 • $73.99 • (£57.00)
978-0-7618-4343-6 • eBook • February 2009 • $70.00 • (£54.00)
Marguerite (Sister Thérèse) Vacher, CSJ has been involved in research, teaching, and writing on the origins of the Sisters of St. Joseph since 1965 and holds the Doctorat d'Histoire moderne from the Université Lumière Lyon 2. Her publications include the critical edition of Sœurs de Saint-Joseph: Textes primitives (1981) and Des "régulières" dans le siècle: Les sœursde Saint-Joseph du P. Médaille aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles (1991). She resides in Clermont-Ferrand.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Religious Life For Women in Seventeenth-Century France
Part 2 Part One: The Genesis of the "Little Design"
Chapter 3 Introduction to Part One: Le Puy-en-Valey in the Seventeenth-Century
Chapter 4 1. The Founders
Chapter 5 2. Beginners
Chapter 6 3. Early Growth
Part 7 Conclusion to Part One: The Genesis and Its Fruit
Part 8 Part Two: Normative Texts and Actual Life in Communities of St. Joseph
Chapter 9 Introduction to Part Two: Expansion in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries
Chapter 10 4. The First Printed Constitutions - Vienne, 1694
Chapter 11 5. The Superiors Role: A Key to Life in the Communities
Chapter 12 6. Structures of Daily Life
Chapter 13 7. Principal Houses and Souers agrégées
Chapter 14 Conclusion: Father Medaille's Legacy
A beautifully smooth and professional translation of a compelling and indispensable landmark text in the history of social provision in France. It is the story of how in the mid-seventeenth century six largely uneducated village women of modest means were brought together by a concerned Jesuit to form an association recognized and promoted by the local bishop and directed to village services such as recycling clothing and blankets, feeding and sheltering orphans or children whose parents were disabled, and teaching survival skills like lace making. It was to be the acorn that produced the oak, the genesis of a significant worldwide movement, the Sisters of St. Joseph.
— Olwen Hufton, Merton College, Oxford
Byrne's translation provides us with Vacher's technical research and analyses, yet maintains a clear and concise narrative. Nuns Without Cloister includes extensive use of footnotes; at the end are supporting documents, charts, glossary, index and bibliography. Nuns Without Cloister will be of interest to graduate students and researchers interested in history of women's congregations, women's spirituality and history as well as Catholic studies.
— MAGISTRA: A Journal of Women's Spirituality in History