Reading Women in Late Medieval England
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Abstract
<p>This dissertation examines and identifies the ways in which devotional
activities became feminized textual practices in the later Middle Ages. Tracing
the vicissitudes of elite women's involvement in the production and dissemination
of a series of devotional texts, Reading Women in Late Medieval England offers a
new critical lens through which to better understand women's involvement in the
literary culture of the late Middle Ages by focusing on the historical figure of the
aristocratic laywoman reader. It pursues her influence across a generic range of
devotional material in English and French, from female hagiography to didactic
prose to prayer, including translations undertaken by women. The texts under
consideration here, ranging in date from the mid-fifteenth to the early sixteenth
centuries, represent the most popular books in medieval libraries and arose in a
context of growing vernacular literacy and a movement toward affective forms of
piety. Drawing on a number of fifteenth-century sources, including wills,
household accounts and library inventories, the project recognizes the
fundamental and specific engagement of women with some of the most important
developments in vernacular literature, late medieval spirituality and book culture.</p> <p>Falling easily into two sections, the first two chapters of this study focus
on manuscripts commissioned for or by women readers and examine the ways in
which the presence of specific women readers enters into the text. The second
two chapters shift the focus to early printed books and take up the issues
surrounding the presence of the woman reader as patron and the development of her cachet with respect to devotional literature made available to a broad and
diverse audience. Reading women back into the leaves of the books they read,
owned and commissioned, I investigate their presence via two prevalent
metaphors: that of speaking and that of seeing. The voice and visibility of the
elite woman reader, available in rare and rarely read texts, allows me to
reconsider and refigure late medieval devotional literature not as a genre
fashioned for women, but as a genre fashioned by women.</p>
Description
Title: Reading Women in Late Medieval England, Author: Stephanie Morley, Location: Mills