To the glory of her sex: women's roles in the composition of medieval texts

To the Glory of Her Sex presents an account of medieval women's activities as correspondents, readers, writers, and literary patrons from antiquity through the fourteenth century. The writings explored here represent a cross-section of virtually every field in historical and literary studies, i...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ferrante, Joan M. 1936- (Author)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Bloomington [u.a.] Indiana Univ. Press 1997
Series:Women of letters
Subjects:
Online Access:Inhaltsverzeichnis
Summary:To the Glory of Her Sex presents an account of medieval women's activities as correspondents, readers, writers, and literary patrons from antiquity through the fourteenth century. The writings explored here represent a cross-section of virtually every field in historical and literary studies, including Latin literature, romance literature in French, political and religious correspondence, theological and moral treatises written for women, and histories and biographies commissioned by or addressed to women. Reading in the public and private correspondence of medieval women, for example, Ferrante discovered to what degree their involvement in affairs of the world and their role in the work of prominent men have been underestimated. Among the major figures in this panorama are Elisabeth Schonau, Hildegard of Bingen, Hrotsvit, Marie de France, and Christine de Pizan.
Physical Description:XII, 295 S.
ISBN:0253332540
0253211085

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