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Case for Women in Medieval Culture, The


Case for Women in Medieval Culture, The

Paperback by Blamires, Alcuin (Senior Lecturer in English, Senior Lecturer in English, University of Wales)

Case for Women in Medieval Culture, The

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ISBN:
9780198186304
Publication Date:
27 Aug 1998
Language:
English
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Pages:
288 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 27 May - 1 Jun 2024
Case for Women in Medieval Culture, The

Description

Misogyny is of course not the whole story of medieval discourse on women: medieval culture also envisaged a case for women. But hitherto studies of profeminine attitudes in that periods culture have tended to concentrate on courtly literature or on female visionary writings or on attempts to transcend misogyny by major authors such as Christine de Pizan and Chaucer. This book sets out to demonstrate something different: that there existed from early in the Middle Ages a corpus of substantial traditions in defence of women, on which the more familiar authors drew, and that this corpus itself consolidated strands of profeminine thought that had been present as far back as the patristic literature of the fourth century. The Case for Women surveys extant writings formally defending women in the Middle Ages; breaks new ground by identifying a source for profeminine argument in biblical apocrypha; offers a series of explorations of the background and circulation of central arguments on behalf of women; and seeks to situate relevant texts by Christine de Pizan, Chaucer, Abelard, and Hrotsvitha in relation to these arguments. Topics covered range from the privileges of women, and pro-Eve polemic, to the social and moral strengths attributed to women, and to the powerful modelsfrequently disruptive of patriarchal complacencypresented by Old and New Testament women. The contribution made by these emphases (which are not to be confused with feminism in a modern sense) to medieval constructions of gender is throughout critically assessed, and the book concludes by asking how far defenders were controlled by, or able to query, assumptions about what was natural (and therefore imagined inflexible) in gender theory.

Contents

Introduction ; 1. The Formal Case: The Corpus ; 2. The Formal Case: Origins, Procedures ; 3. Honouring Mothers ; 4. Eve and the Privileges of Women ; 5. The Stable Sex ; 6. Exemplifying Feminine Stability ; 7. Profeminine Role Models ; 8. The Formal Case in Abelard, Chaucer, Christine de Pizan ; Conclusion ; Bibliography ; Index

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