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Awful Disclosures of the Hotel Dieu Nunnery of Montreal is a story of a nun who witnessed numerous crimes executed under the roof of a Canadian convent. The exposures related to the sexual exploitation of nuns, the killings of illegitimately born infants, and other nuns who opposed the monastery's rules. The narrator escapes the convent to save the life of her unborn child and, after escaping, agrees to tell about her experience in an interview that laid the basis of this book.

Produktbeschreibung
Awful Disclosures of the Hotel Dieu Nunnery of Montreal is a story of a nun who witnessed numerous crimes executed under the roof of a Canadian convent. The exposures related to the sexual exploitation of nuns, the killings of illegitimately born infants, and other nuns who opposed the monastery's rules. The narrator escapes the convent to save the life of her unborn child and, after escaping, agrees to tell about her experience in an interview that laid the basis of this book.
Autorenporträt
Maria Monk (1816-1849) was a Canadian author who became known for her controversial 1836 book 'Awful Disclosures of the Hotel Dieu Nunnery of Montreal', which purported to reveal secret rituals and the mistreatment of nuns within a convent. Monk's allegations of sexual exploitation and infanticide perpetrated by Catholic clergy sparked outrage and a widespread anti-Catholic sentiment at the time. Her book played into the nativist and anti-Catholic fears of the Protestant majority in the United States, where the book was a best-seller. Despite later investigations that discredited many of Monk's claims, her book remains a significant artifact of 19th-century American nativism and anti-Catholic propaganda. Monk's literary style is characterized by vivid, melodramatic narratives that align with the sensationalist literature of her era. While her work is often dismissed by historians as largely fictitious, 'Awful Disclosures' continues to be studied as a piece of American and Canadian religious and social history. Maria Monk's life after the publication of her book was marked by public scrutiny and personal difficulties, and she died in relative obscurity.