Anne J. Cruz is Professor of Spanish and Cooper Fellow at the University of Miami, USA. Maria Galli Stampino is Professor of Italian and French at the University of Miami, USA.
Prize: Best Collaborative Project of 2013 in Gender and Women's Studies (Honorable Mention) from the Society for the Study of Early Modern Women '... [a] rich and multifaceted study that examines the real power of early modern Habsburg women, a subject traditionally ignored or undervalued by historians. It focuses on the social, cultural, and political contributions of six Habsburg women, as queens, duchesses, vicereines or in one fascinating case, a nun.' Barbara Weissberger, University of Minnesota, and author of Isabel Rules: Constructing Queenship, Wielding Power ’This collection is an excellent contribution to extant scholarship on the Hapsburg dynasty, combining a number of disciplines and approaches in-cluding gender studies, art history, literature and drama, court studies and po-litical history in order to produce a volume replete with strong studies. The scholarship is of a very high calibre ...’ Royal Studies Journal '... a welcome contribution to the growing body of scholarship on early modern women and gender as well as to those focused on political culture and imperial identities in early modern Europe.' Sixteenth Century Journal '... this collection of essays demonstrates a high level of scholarship and raises interesting questions regarding the duties and opportunities available to female members of the Habsburg clan. It is a welcome addition to the study of early modern women, and will, hopefully, stimulate further collective and comparative work on these - and other - still little known but nevertheless important figures.' Renaissance & Reformation 'This volume appropriately highlights the transnational, often-conflictive aspects of dynastic politics, including contributions from authors based in Europe as well as the United States. ... the collection offers insights that could be crucial for developing an integrated, multidisciplinary approach.' Renaissance Quarterly