THE REMEDIAL HERSTORY PROJECT: THE OTHER 50% OF HISTORY CLASS
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Women of the Reformation

1/21/2021

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The Reformation swept through Europe in the first half of the 16th century. What began as an attempt by theologians to reform the existing Catholic Church, soon spiralled into a movement of huge theological debate, resulting in great cultural change, political division and war. The end result was a divided Christian Church that we now understand to be the Catholic Church and the Protestant Church.

When people think about the Reformation, they tend to think about the ‘big names’ of Reformation theology like Martin Luther, John Calvin, William Farel, Martin Bucer and Huldrych Zwingli. And what do all of these figures have in common? They’re all men. Historians and Christians alike view the Reformation almost exclusively from the viewpoint of the male Reformers. This is shown most clearly in the Reformation Wall monument in Geneva. Created in the early 20th century, the wall spans over 100 meters depicting the names and figures of the Reformation. Not one woman is represented.
In 2018 I wanted to address this by writing my final year History dissertation on the women of the Reformation. I was assigned a Professor who specialised in this time period as my supervisor. During our first meeting he informed me that, in his informed opinion, this topic could only be a paragraph, not even a chapter of my dissertation because what would I write about? The women of the Reformation were “just wives and mothers”.[1] I left that meeting, applied for a new supervisor and wrote my original dissertation as planned. But as I researched my dissertation it became clear that this Professor was not alone in his belief.


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    16th Century
    Barriers To Women's History
    Caroline Taylor
    Historiography
    Kelsie Eckert
    Pedagogy
    Reformation
    World History

    About

    ​The history curriculum in schools is insufficient in their representation of women’s contribution to past events. This blog aims to address that. While teachers want to include women’s history, they have not had access to the training, modeling, and resources to do it effectively. Women make up fifty percent of the global population, and yet are in a small fraction of events discussed in school. Women’s choices have been harrowing, infamous, and monumental, and yet their stories are so rarely associated with mainstream history. Ask your average high school graduate, or even college graduate, to name 20 significant men in history and the list flows easily. Ask that same person to name 20 women and the names drag, if they come at all. This case in point leaves us with conclusions like, “women did not do as much” or “women’s stories were not recorded.” These assertions justify our own indifference to the history of half the human race, and could not be further from the truth.

    The flaws and impact of how we teach history are many. Women often get summarized in history in vague terms of their roles, rights, or responsibilities, and individual women are rarely mentioned. Never will you see a section in a history book where men are generalized in this way. If we were to generalize gendered behaviors, it is clear that human qualities such as powerful, innovative, and disruptive regularly make the books. Not surprisingly, feminine qualities of compassion, maintaining, and healing do not make the books as these are often grassroots ideals and are not as easily taught in hisotry. These self-effacing qualities doom women to being underrepresented, yet can you imagine a world without them? And further, when women’s actions have all the hallmarks of history, somehow their accomplishments still don’t make the cut, or do so with the caveat of “for a woman” tacked on.

    We study history to learn from our past. Girls have been denied the opportunity to fully learn about women’s struggles and triumphs in schools. Public history teachers, like myself, are stuck in a cycle because we never learned women’s history either  . We have failed to mend the errors of our own educations, and are continuing to regurgitate these errors to our students.

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  • Home
    • About RHP
    • Contact and Consulting
    • Testimonials
  • Podcast
    • Episodes
    • Our Guests
    • Apply to Speak
    • Sponsor Our Work
  • Store
  • Lessons
    • Submit a Lesson Plan
    • Buy Our Lessons
    • K-6 Lessons
    • 7-12 Lessons Dashboard >
      • World History
      • United States Women's History >
        • Early American History: Cultural Encounters
        • The Revolutionary Era: Women's Liberties?
        • The Antebellum Era: Abolition is Women's Ticket
        • The Civil War Era: Women Supporters, Soldiers, and Spies
        • Reconstruction: And Woman Suffrage
        • Industrialization and Imperialism: Women Laborers
        • The Progressive Era: Women's Causes
        • The World War I Era: Woman Suffrage
        • The New Woman Era: Roaring
        • The Great Depression Era: Women Making Do
        • The World War II Era: Women and the War Effort
        • The Post-War Era: Contradictions for Women
        • The Civil Rights Era: And Sexual Freedoms
        • The Feminist Era: Women Redefining Norms
        • The Modern Era: Post Feminism?
  • Resources
    • OTD Calendar
    • Women
    • Blog >
      • About the Blog
      • Blog
    • Reading
    • Feature Films
    • Book Club
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  • Summer Retreat