
New Books Network Patricia Anne Simpson, "Early Modern Women's Work: Kinship, Community, and Social Justice" (Routledge, 2025)
Nov 30, 2025
Patricia Ann Simpson, a scholar of German studies, explores the pivotal roles of early modern women in her new book. She challenges the traditional narratives around women's work by highlighting their contributions to public and intellectual spheres. The discussion delves into themes like educational privilege, emotional labor, and the creation of community spaces against patriarchal constraints. Simpson also profiles notable figures such as Anna Köfelin and Maria Sibylla Merian, emphasizing their innovative responses to personal and cultural challenges.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Pre-Enlightenment Gender Exceptions
- Early modern gendered binaries (public/private, reason/emotion) were not yet fixed and had notable exceptions.
- Patricia Ann Simpson shows privileged women carved heterotopic spaces to perform intellectual and emotional labor.
From Mourning To A Public Kinderhaus
- Anna Köfelin transformed private childloss into a public pedagogical work called the Kinderhaus broadsheet.
- She and her husband modeled, sold tickets, and used engraving to make mourning into productive work.
Writing As Emotional Labor
- Acts of writing functioned as emotional labor and public mourning among women's enclaves.
- Publishing transformed private grief into community texts that challenged consolatory norms of faith.

