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Male Authors, Female Readers: Representation and Subjectivity in Middle English Devotional Literature / Edition 1
Barnes and Noble
Male Authors, Female Readers: Representation and Subjectivity in Middle English Devotional Literature / Edition 1
Current price: $85.95


Barnes and Noble
Male Authors, Female Readers: Representation and Subjectivity in Middle English Devotional Literature / Edition 1
Current price: $85.95
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"Holy men despise women...and view them as foul and sticking dirt in the road," asserst the male author of the fifteenth-century
Book to a Mother
. Middle English devotional writings reflect shades of mysogony ranging from the blatant to the subtle, yet these texts were among the most popular literature know to the earliest generation of English women readers.
In the first book to examine this paradox, Anne Clark Bartlett considers why medieval women enjoyed such male-authored works as
Speculum Devotorum
,
The Tree
The Twelve Fruits of the Holy Ghost
, and
Contemplations on the Dread and Love of God
. Demonstrating that these texts actually provided alternative—and more appealing—notions of gender than those authorized by the Church, Bartlett redefines women's participation in medieval culture in terms of far greater agency and empowerment than have generally been acknowledged.
Book to a Mother
. Middle English devotional writings reflect shades of mysogony ranging from the blatant to the subtle, yet these texts were among the most popular literature know to the earliest generation of English women readers.
In the first book to examine this paradox, Anne Clark Bartlett considers why medieval women enjoyed such male-authored works as
Speculum Devotorum
,
The Tree
The Twelve Fruits of the Holy Ghost
, and
Contemplations on the Dread and Love of God
. Demonstrating that these texts actually provided alternative—and more appealing—notions of gender than those authorized by the Church, Bartlett redefines women's participation in medieval culture in terms of far greater agency and empowerment than have generally been acknowledged.