Performing Polity: Women and Agency in the Anglo-French Tradition, 1385-1620

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Reading a variety of texts centred in the power and agency of women during the period 1385 to 1620, this book examines changing ideals of gender within the context of changing ideologies of governance and polity. Together the essays that comprise this book lay out three lines of thinking about women and polity: that the ideology of late medieval gender roles articulated in Anglo-French texts of the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries outlined important roles for women's voice and agency in supporting the larger polity as well as the smaller household; that the acceptance and the value of those roles diminished as models of polity in both Church and State in England changed in the early modern period; that to see this change merely in terms of change in expectations of gender roles is to miss the vital link between the status of women and the political construction of individual relationship to authority. Woman is the site on which society delineates the degree of freedom and independence it will tolerate in the political subject. The attention directed to women's roles in the plethora of woman-centred stories, courtesy books, prayer books, sermons and tracts in the period 1385-1620 is an index to shifting alignments of power that replaced medieval models of partnership and co-operation with models of obedience.

Author(s): Carolyn P. Collette
Series: Medieval Women: Texts and Contexts, 15
Publisher: Brepols
Year: 2006

Language: English
Pages: 224
City: Turnhout

Introduction 1
Chapter 1. Christine de Pizan: Mapping the Routes to Agency 21
Chapter 2. Philippe de Mézières, the Good Wife, and 'le bien publique' 41
Chapter 3. Political Griselda: 'L’Estoire de Griseldis' and Nicole Oresme’s Translation of Aristotle’s 'Politics' 59
Chapter 4. The Power of the Virgin: Gaining the Right to Speak 79
Chapter 5. Anne of Bohemia and the Intercessory Modes of Ricardian England 99
Chapter 6. Catherine of Aragon, a New Griselda for a New Polity 123
Chapter 7. 'Nowe leaft of': The York Pageants of the Death, Assumption, and Coronation of the Virgin 141
Chapter 8. Walter 'Triumphans': Performing Polity in Late Tudor-Stuart England 173
Coda 193
Bibliography 197
Index 211