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Women Intellectuals and Leaders in the Middle Ages Professor Kathryn Kerby-Fulton (Person)

Women Intellectuals and Leaders in the Middle Ages By Professor Kathryn Kerby-Fulton (Person)

Women Intellectuals and Leaders in the Middle Ages by Professor Kathryn Kerby-Fulton (Person)


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Summary

Wide-ranging examination of women's achievements in and influence on many aspects of medieval culture.

Women Intellectuals and Leaders in the Middle Ages Summary

Women Intellectuals and Leaders in the Middle Ages by Professor Kathryn Kerby-Fulton (Person)

Wide-ranging examination of women's achievements in and influence on many aspects of medieval culture. Medieval women were normally denied access to public educational institutions, and so also denied the gateways to most leadership positions. Modern scholars have therefore tended to study learned medieval women as simply anomalies, and women generally as victims. This volume, however, argues instead for a via media. Drawing upon manuscript and archival sources, scholars here show that more medieval women attained some form of learning than hitherto imagined, and that women with such legal, social or ecclesiastical knowledge also often exercised professional or communal leadership. Bringing together contributors from the disciplines of literature, history and religion, this volume challenges several traditional views: firstly, the still-prevalent idea that women's intellectual accomplishments were limited to the Latin literate. The collection therefore engages heavily with vernacular writings (in Anglo-Saxon, Middle English, French, Dutch, German and Italian), and also with material culture (manuscript illumination, stained glass, fabric and jewelry) for evidence of women's advanced capabilities. But in doing so, the contributors strive to avoid the equally problematic view that women's accomplishments were somehow limited to the vernacular and the material. So several essays examine women at work with the sacred languages of the three Abrahamic traditions (Latin, Arabic and Hebrew). And a third traditional view is also interrogated: that women were somehow more original for their lack of learning and and dependence on their mother tongue. Scholars here agree wholeheartedly that women could be daring thinkers in any language; they engage readily with women's learnedness wherever it can be found.

Women Intellectuals and Leaders in the Middle Ages Reviews

The team of scholars who pulled this collection together have rendered us a great service. . . . Each contributor is a gifted and concise writer. Younger scholars will find much here to expand their own research and thinking; so will graduate students in many fields. The book is especially valuable in its modeling of effective collaboration among interdisciplinary fields. * Magistra *
The readers will find it helpful to have the introductory sections focus on the wider methodological framework and scholarship for each of the approaches taken, while the didactic setup makes this book an ideal tool for teaching purposes. The overall introduction and epilogue are superb in setting the scene, warning of pitfalls, and identifying new avenues of research. Above all, they remind the reader that the women discussed in this volume constitute probably only the tip of an iceberg and for this reason they encourage us to continue digging in archives and libraries to identify more of them. * Church History *
Women Intellectuals and Leaders in the Middle Ages is an impressive volume of essays that ranges across academic disciplines, countries, time periods, and sources in order to contribute to key debates about women's history and role in intellectual life throughout the medieval period. The editors, Kathryn Kerby-Fulton, Katie Ann-Marie Bugyis, and John Van Engen, set out to tak[e] early women intellectuals and leaders seriously, as the title of Kerby-Fulton's introduction puts it, and in this aim it absolutely succeeds. * Journal of British Studies *

About Professor Kathryn Kerby-Fulton (Person)

KATHRYN KERBY-FULTON is Professor Emerita, University of Notre Dame. KATIEANN-MARIE BUGYIS is Associate Professor, University of Notre Dame. JOHN VAN ENGEN is Professor Emeritus, University of Notre Dame. KATHRYN KERBY-FULTON is Professor Emerita, University of Notre Dame. JOHN VAN ENGEN is Professor Emeritus, University of Notre Dame. NICHOLAS WATSON teaches English at Harvard University. His research focuses on medieval English and North European literature, intellectual history, visionary writing and the role of the written vernacular.

Table of Contents

Taking Early Women Intellectuals and Leaders Seriously - Kathryn Kerby-Fulton Authorship and Intellectual Life: Jewish and Muslim Women - Ruth Karras Gender, Scholarship, and the Construction of Authority in the Pre-Modern Muslim World - Asma Afsaruddin The Historiography of Absence: Preliminary Steps Towards a New History of Andalusi Women Poets - S.J. Pearce Medieval Anglo-Jewish Women at Court - Adrienne Williams Boyarin Intellectuals, Leaders, Doctores - David Wallace Agnes of Harcourt as Intellectual: New Evidence for the Composition and Circulation of the Vie d'Isabelle de France - Sean L. Field Catherine of Siena, Auctor - F Thomas Luongo Christine de Pizan on the Jews, in Three Texts: The Heures de contemplation sur la Passion de Nostre Seigneur Jhesucrist, the Fais et bonnes meurs du sage roy Charles V, and the Mutacion de Fortune - Thelma Fenster Walking in Grandmothers' Footsteps: Mary Ward and the Medieval Spiritual and Intellectual Heritage - Gemma C.J. Simmonds New Solutions to Old Problems - Kathryn Kerby-Fulton A Woman Author? The Middle-Dutch Dialogue between a 'Good-willed Layperson' and a 'Master Eckhart' - John Van Engen Recovery and Loss: Women's Writing around Marie de France - Jocelyn Wogan-Browne The Visions, Experiments, and Operations of Bridget of Autruy (fl. 1305-15) - Nicholas Watson Methodological Innovations for the Study of Women's Authorship and Agency - Nicholas Watson Written with Her Own Hand: Perpetua's Representation of Non-Binary Gender in Old English Hagiography - Leanne MacDonald The Materialization of Knowledge in Thirteenth-Century England: Joan Tateshal, Robert Grosseteste, and the Tateshal Miscellany - Anna Siebach-Larson Networks of Influence: Widows, Sole Administration, and Unconventional Relationships in Thirteenth-Century London - Amanda Bohne Religious Women in Leadership, Ministry, and Latin Ecclesiastical Culture - John Van Engen Bede's Abbesses - Sarah Foot Women's Latinity in the Early English Anchorhold - Megan J. Hall The Treatment of Ordination in Recent Scholarship on Religious Women in the Early Middle Ages - Gary Macy Saint Colette de Corbie (1381-1447): Reformist Leadership and Belated Sainthood - Renate Blumenfeld-Kosinski Women Priests at Barking Abbey in the Late Middle Ages - K.A. Bugyis Laywomen as Leaders - Dyan Elliott Women Donors and Ecclesiastical Reform: Evidence from Camaldoli and Vallombrosa, c. 1000-1150 - Maureen C. Miller Laywomen's Leadership in Medieval Miracle Cults: Evidence from Britain, ca. 1150-1250 - Rachel Koopmans Mechthild of Magdeburg at Helfta: A Study in Literary Influence - Barbara Newman Positioning Women in Medieval Society, Culture, and Religion: An Epilogue - John Van Engen

Additional information

NGR9781843846765
9781843846765
1843846764
Women Intellectuals and Leaders in the Middle Ages by Professor Kathryn Kerby-Fulton (Person)
New
Paperback
Boydell & Brewer Ltd
2022-11-22
438
N/A
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