Prize: Winner in the Collaborative Project category for books published in 2011, awarded by the Society for the Study of Early Modern Women 'Women's Literacy in Early Modern Spain and the New World will interest anyone engaged in women's studies, early modern history, and the literature of Golden Age Spain. This volume cogently demonstrates that, contrary to received notions, many early modern Spanish women were well educated, although they could take many different paths to reach that educated state.' Ronald E. Surtz, Princeton University, USA '... one of those rare critical studies that is so full of compelling insights that it is a true academic page turner. It is a recent title in the series Women and Gender in the Early Modern World published by Ashgate and is one of the finest examples of scholarship and among the freshest approaches to the study of Spain and the New World in recent memory... There is a comprehensive index at the end of the collection to facilitate searches for specific authors, cultural critics, thematic approaches, and types of primary sources, including categories such as vidas, letter-writing, and devotional texts. In all, this is a well-conceived, thoughtfully executed, and engaging collection of scholarship.' Renaissance Quarterly '... through presentations of a variety of social contexts and literary genres, and undergirded by clear methodologies, this collection takes us closer to a deeper comprehension of the historical reality.' Hispanic American Historical Review 'This book will prove appealing to historians, scholars of religion, gender studies specialists, literature professors, book history people, and students of mysticism... The contributors also demonstrate an acute consciousness of one another’s work, referencing each other’s essays in a way that lends cohesion to the collection as a whole.' Sixteenth Century Journal '... this is an engaging collection which merits a broad readership among scholars of women’s educa