Examines interrelated topics in Medieval and Renaissance Latin literature: the status of women as writers, the status of women as rhetorical figures, and the status of women in society from the fifth to the early seventeenth century.
This collection reclaims a vast body of long-neglected Latin texts from the Middle Ages and the Renaissance and examines how they represent the feminine and the female body. The authors explore the ideological values explicitly encoded by the feminine in these texts, other, less articulated values implied by the feminine, and the role of the classical tradition in communicating those values. The examination of women both as subjects and as rhetorical constructions in Medieval and Renaissance Latin literature sheds light on the larger dialogue about feminism occurring throughout the humanities. In addition, the inclusion of a new body of texts and the rescue of others from their present isolation will expand the reach of classical and humanist scholarship.
Traditional studies of Latin literature end around the beginning of the fifth century C.E. despite the fact that Latin continued to be the dominant literary and intellectual language until at least the latter half of the sixteenth century. Thus most classicists ignore over one thousand years of the Latin literary tradition. Few non-classicists read Latin comfortably and fewer still have a detailed understanding of the history of classical Latin literature. Nevertheless, a knowledge of this history was assumed by most Neo-Latin writers as well as their contemporaries who wrote in the vernacular. This collection supplies tools to examine more completely the construction and application of gender in both Latin and vernacular texts of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.
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Barbara K. Gold is Leonard C. Ferguson Professor of Classics at Hamilton College. She has written and edited two books on literary patronage in Greece and Rome. Paul Allen Miller is Assistant Professor of Classics at Texas Tech University. His previous work includes Lyric Texts and Lyric Consciousness. Charles Platter is Assistant Professor of Classics at the University of Georgia.
Les informations fournies dans la section « A propos du livre » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.
Vendeur : Books From California, Simi Valley, CA, Etats-Unis
Hardcover. Etat : Fine. N° de réf. du vendeur mon0003282129
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Vendeur : Borkert, Schwarz und Zerfaß GbR, Berlin, Allemagne
kart. Etat : Sehr gut. 330 Seiten Sehr gutes und sauberes Exemplar. / Very good and clean copy. - Content: Introduction -- Barbara K. Gold, Paul Allen Miller, and Charles Platter -- By Woman's Tears Redeemed: Female Lament in St. Augustine's Confessions and the Correspondence of Abelard and Heloise Nancy A. Jones -- Hrotswitha Writes Herself: Clamor Validus Gandeshemensis Barbara K. Gold -- Gender and Negotiating Discourse: Mediated Autobiography and Female Mystics of Medieval Italy Phyllis Culham -- The Saint of the Womanly Body: Raimon de Cornet's Fourteenth-Century Male Poetics St. John E. Flynn -- Petrarch's Sophonisba: Seduction, Sacrifice, and Patriarchal Politics Donald Gilman -- Laurel as the Sign of Sin: Laura's Textual Body in Petrarch's Secretum Paul Allen Miller -- Woman, Space, and Renaissance Discourse Diana Robin -- In Praise of Woman's Superiority: Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa's De nobilitate (1529) Diane S. Wood -- The Artificial Whore: George Buchanan's Apologia pro Lena Charles Platter -- "She Never Recovered Her Senses": Roxana and Dramatic Representations of Women at Oxbridge in the Elizabethan Age -- Elizabeth Richmond-Garza -- Latin and Greek Poetry by Five Renaissance Italian Women Humanists Holt Parker -- Bibliography -- Contributors -- Index. ISBN 9780791432457 Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 612. N° de réf. du vendeur 1242236
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)