Cambr., CUP, 1986.
Reference : 71993
112 p., ills. Pb.
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Turnhout, Brepols, 2004 Hardback, X+384 p., 160 x 240 mm. ISBN 9782503511658.
This volume explores the reciprocal relationships that can develop between medieval women writers and the modern scholars who study them. Taking up the call to 'research the researcher', the authors indicate not only what they bring to their study from their own personal experience, but how their methodologies and ways of thinking about and dealing with the past have been influenced by the medieval women they study. Medieval women writers discussed include those writing in the vernacular such as Christine de Pizan and Margaret Paston, those writing in Latin such as Hildegard of Bingen, Heloise, and Birgitta of Sweden, and the works transcribed from women mystics such as Margery Kempe, Hadewijch, and Julian of Norwich. Attention is also given to medieval women as the readers, consumers and patrons of written works. Issues considered in this volume include the place of ethics, interestedness and social justice in contemporary medieval studies, questions of alterity, empathy, essentialism and appropriation in dealing with figures of the medieval past, the permeable boundaries between academic medieval studies and popular medievalism, questions of situatedness and academic voice, and the relationship between feminism and medieval studies. Linked to these issues is the interrelation between medieval women and medieval men in the production and consumption of written works both for and about women and the implications of this for both female and male readers of those works today. Overarching all these questions is that of the intellectual and methodological heritage - sometimes ambiguous, perhaps even problematic - that medieval women continue to offer us. Languages : English.
, brepo, 2025 Hardcover Pages: xiv + 376 p.Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:2 b/w, 5 col., 4 tables b/w. Language(s):English, Italian, French. *new. ISBN 9782503616810.
Summary The letter was the most widespread means of communication in the Middle Ages and the most practiced literary genre also among women. This volume, produced under the auspices of the Medieval Women in Letters project from the MedioEvA Center (University of Siena, Rome Sapienza and Tours), explores the rhetorical, literary, thematic, and historical-cultural aspects of the female epistolography in the Middle Ages. Latin literature constitutes a cohesive element between the various vernacular languages that were establishing themselves during the Middle Ages, and this volume promotes the study of women?s literature and medieval woman by adopting a consistently comparative and translinguistic method, analyzing women?s literature in all the languages used in medieval Europe. The methodology focuses on the literary tradition, especially the linguistic and philological spheres. Specialists in Germanic, Middle Latin, Romance, Arabic, Italian, and Byzantine literature discuss published and unpublished female letters, with particular focus on the main challenges that female writing in the Middle Ages presents, including: authorship, the relationship between copyist and author, the degree of female literacy, training structures, the role of writing in the various seasons of the Middle Ages, and the modern critical reception of female epistolography. As a result, this volume seeks to dismantle obsolete critical prejudices and redefine a literary canon that fully includes women. TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface Reflections on Women and Letters JOAN M. FERRANTE Le lettere delle principesse gote d?Italia PAOLO MASTANDREA Merovingian Female Letter-Writing: The Case of Caesaria II of Arles DONATELLA MANZOLI Arcana Imperii: Matilde a Canossa (1077) e Matelda "in Paradiso deliciarum" CLAUDIA VILLA La figura della monaca Emma nelle epistole poetiche di Balderico di Bourgeuil ARMANDO BISANTI Love and ?Unlove? in Medieval Women?s Letters ELISABETTA BARTOLI A nome di donne: Lettere di Boncompagno da Signa PAOLO GARBINI Qu?y a-t-il de féminin dans les lettres de Gherardesca de Battifolle à Marguerite de Brabant? BENOÎT GRÉVIN Représentation de soi et modèles d?écriture féminins dans l?épître d?amour française à voix de femme SPERANZA CERULLO L?Épitre à la reine de Christine de Pizan: une lettre de circonstance? SYLVIE LEFÈVRE De caritate tua diligenter confidens: The Correspondence between Boniface and Eadburg CLAUDIA DI SCIACCA Olympias and the Others: Female Correspondence in the Byzantine Alexander Romance TOMMASO BRACCINI "Wasalat ruq?atu-ki ...": Female Letters in Ahmad Zak? ?afwat?s ?amharat Rasâ ?il al-?Arab: Presence and Absence of Women in Medieval Arabic Letter-Writing PEDRO BUENDÍA Andrea Acciaiuoli: Une femme de Lettres SABRINA FERRARA Women Writing to Women in Lapa Acciauoli?s Correspondence ELSA FILOSA "Fa scrivere a me perch?io appari": Donne e lettere nelle carte Brancacci ALESSIA VALENTI Antifemmicidio di Cereta FEDERICO SANGUINETI Notes on Contributors
J. Wogan-Browne, R. Voaden, A. Diamond, A. Hutchison, C. Meale, L. Johnson (eds.);
Reference : 39935
Turnhout, Brepols, 2000 Hardback, XVI+436 p., 160 x 245 mm. ISBN 9782503509792.
Profiting from the development of newly flexible models of gender, literacy, the political, the social, and the domestic, this volume on medieval women considers the broadest implications for the study of medieval culture without simply re-absorbing medieval women into invisibility. In this themed collection of 24 articles by literary, historical and archaeological scholars, the study of medieval women is confidently and freshly mainstream. Profiting from the development of newly flexible models of gender, literacy, the political, the social, and the domestic, the volume is non-separatist, exploratory both of new source materials and new readings of established sources, and able to consider the broadest implications for the study of medieval culture without simply re-absorbing medieval women into invisibility. Grouped under the headings of matters of reading, of conduct and place, the essays move from legal cases to actual buildings and conceptions of the household to conduct books and chronicles to romances and saints' lives to the medieval unconscious and back again, exemplifying the mature interdisciplinarity of current work on medieval women. Languages : English.
1976 Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1976 21 x 14,5 cm, 112 pp Very good condition
Reprinted, soft cover, with black & white illustrations.
New York, Vintage Books, 1961, in-8vo, brochure originale.
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