This MSCA has pushed the frontiers of literary understanding forward in numerous ways. The article the Fellow submitted opened a field of study and methodology crossing literary methodologies with the history of ideas and religious studies. The Fellow has shed new light on the lives of forgotten Dominican writers, linking their legacy and voice to the great reformers and writers of the past. In addition, she researched a neglected epic poem written in the seventeenth century by Margherita Costa and highlighted her use of religious figures to foster her authorial identity. Overall, the Fellow disseminated her research via numerous presentations at international conferences, the organisation of a symposium, a seminar and an entire panel at the Italian Society in presentia. She also spread knowledge of her research via blog posts and a podcast is available, aimed at a younger public. She also organised a public event online with a non-profit association of retirees . The combined activities created discussion and debate about the role of women across the centuries, challenging typical stereotypes and images still embedded in Italian culture. Furthermore, in her role as co-founder of the publishing house Le plurali editrice, she ran, during the pandemic, an interactive workshop on early modern women writers for pupils of a secondary school in her home area.
Impacts anticipated from the MSCA have been achieved: the fellow has collaborated with feminist blogs to discuss the contribution of early modern women writers to the literary canon; she collaborated with school teachers giving a class lecture on female saints and women writers and with a non-profit association for retirees. In addition, the findings have been disseminated via articles published in leading journals (Renaissance and Reformation; Studi Secenteschi), edited volumes that are going to be published in 2022 by Brill and Delaware Press, and a special issue that will also be published in 2022. In addition, an encyclopaedia entry on apocalyptic literature by women will be published next year in the “European Literature and Drama” section of the Routledge Encyclopedia of the Renaissance World (RERW), a new digital platform in development under the General Editorship of the University of Delaware.