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.
Author(s): Louise D’Arcens, Juanita Feros Ruys (eds.)
Series: Making the Middle Ages, 7
Publisher: Brepols Publishers
Year: 2004
Language: English
Pages: X+384
Preface ix
Introduction / Louise D’Arcens & Juanita Feros Ruys 1
The Practice of Medieval Studies
"Ex epistolis duarum magistrarum" / Wendy Harding & Philippa Maddern 27
Encountering Hildegard: Between Apocalypse and The New Age / Constant J. Mews 75
A Path of Long Study: In Search of Christine de Pizan / Earl Jeffrey Richards 93
Her Own "Maistresse"?: Christine de Pizan the Professional Amateur / Louise D’Arcens 119
Empathy, Ethics, and Imagination
Desire for the Past: Afterword / Nicholas Watson 149
Critics, Communities, Compassionate Criticism: Learning from "The Book of Margery Kempe" / Diane Watt 191
Playing Alterity: Heloise, Rhetoric, and "Memoria": Interrogating Heloise / Juanita Feros Ruys 211
Medieval Women and Modern Women
Uncanny Dialogues: The Journal of Mistress Joan Martyn' and "The Book of Margery Kempe" / Marea Mitchell 247
Redemptive Suffering: The Life of Alice of Schaerbeek in a Contemporary Context / Shawn Madison Krahmer 267
Religious Feminism in the Middle Ages: Birgitta of Sweden / Kari Elisabeth Børresen 295
Women Readers
Reading Women Reading: Feminism, Culture, and Memory / Jacqueline Jenkins 317
Virginity Always Comes Twice: Virginity and Profession, Virginity and Romance / Jocelyn Wogan-Browne 335
Contributor Biographies 371
Index of Proper Names 375