Voices of Thunder

Radical Religious Women of the Seventeenth Century

Naomi Baker author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Reaktion Books

Publishing:1st Oct '25

£15.99

This title is due to be published on 1st October, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Voices of Thunder cover

Voices of Thunder illuminates the stories and beliefs of more than a dozen seventeenth-century radical Protestant women, including a Colchester woman who feared that her four children would starve to death and a former maidservant from Yorkshire who was granted an audience with the sultan of the Ottoman Empire. Their belief in spiritual equality empowered them to resist the status quo, questioning the authority of those who sought to lord it over them. From mostly humble backgrounds, they found ways to make their voices heard, creating some of the earliest autobiographical accounts in English and allowing us a rare and precious glimpse of the lives and experiences of women in the early modern era.

In Voices of Thunder Naomi Baker gives us the most accessible, detailed and well-informed study to date of women preachers and prophets of the seventeenth-century, a time when nearly all women were meant to stay home and be quiet. Baker shows us how very many women were involved and influential in the early Baptist and Quaker movements and beyond, and how sharply they saw gender and class oppression, while often enduring harsh persecution, usually by men, at home and abroad. With notable biographical skill and sympathy, the author shows us how the women prophets saw and experienced their world. All can benefit from this book, and many will find it an eye-opening revelation. * Nigel Smith, Princeton University, author of Andrew Marvell: The Chameleon *
Voices of Thunder offers a ground-breaking account of the radical women who, during the political, social and religious turmoil of seventeenth-century Britain and Ireland, found voice and vocation. Naomi Baker is an outstanding guide to this complex, challenging and extraordinary culture. * Crawford Gribben, Professor of History at Queen's University Belfast and author of J. N. Darby and the Roots of Dispensationalism *
This book crackles and fizzes with the energy and bravado of the many overlooked women who metaphorically hitched up their skirts to challenge forms of authority that sought to marginalise them. Naomi Baker brings deft erudition to her narrative and stylishly synthesises the complex histories of religious radicalism in the seventeenth century. This elegantly written and lively book has much to teach us about belief, politics and activism in both the seventeenth century and the contemporary moment. * Danielle Clarke, Professor of English Renaissance Language and Literature, University College Dublin *
This book gives eloquent expression to a remarkable group of seventeenth-century women who refused to conform. From intimate domestic spaces to the corridors of power, these women confronted those structures designed to keep them silent and obedient, and they did so by channelling the divinely authorised voice of the conscience. Naomi Baker is a lucid and sensitive guide to this fascinatingly complex historical terrain. Her timely book reminds us of the urgent need to listen to the voices of those who disrupt our social and moral commonplaces. * Adrian Streete, Professor of Early Modern Literature and Religion, University of Glasgow *
For the radical religious women who abandoned the Church of England in the seventeenth century, personal contact with God enabled outspoken resistance to the status quo. Urgent and completely absorbing, Voices of Thunder tells their stories in vivid detail, recasting seventeenth-century women’s literary history by turning away from elite culture to highlight the innovative and visionary voices of England’s dissenting women. * Sarah C. E. Ross, Professor of English, Victoria University of Wellington *

ISBN: 9781836391197

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

320 pages