Land of Women: Tales of Sex and Gender from Early Ireland / Edition 1

Land of Women: Tales of Sex and Gender from Early Ireland / Edition 1

by Lisa M. Bitel
ISBN-10:
0801485444
ISBN-13:
9780801485442
Pub. Date:
03/26/1998
Publisher:
Cornell University Press
ISBN-10:
0801485444
ISBN-13:
9780801485442
Pub. Date:
03/26/1998
Publisher:
Cornell University Press
Land of Women: Tales of Sex and Gender from Early Ireland / Edition 1

Land of Women: Tales of Sex and Gender from Early Ireland / Edition 1

by Lisa M. Bitel

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Overview

"This book disperses the shadows in an obscure but important landscape. Lisa Bitel addresses both the history of women in early Ireland and the history of myth, legend, and superstition which surrounded them. It is a powerful and exact book and an invaluable addition to our expanding sense of Ireland through the eyes of Irish women."—Eavan Boland, author of In a Time of Violence: Poems

"It is refreshing to read in a book by a woman on medieval women that not all clerics hated women and that not all men were oversexed villains consciously bent on exploiting women. [Bitel] challenges not only the medieval Irish male construct of female behavior, but she is also courageous enough to question constructs of medieval women invented by modern Irish medieval historians."—Times Higher Education Supplement


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801485442
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 03/26/1998
Edition description: REPRINT
Pages: 328
Sales rank: 230,036
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.75(d)
Lexile: 1560L (what's this?)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Lisa M. Bitel is Associate Professor of History and Women's Studies at the University of Kansas. She is the author of Isle of the Saints: Monastic Settlement and Christian Community in Early Ireland, also from Cornell.

What People are Saying About This

Nancy J. Curtin

Lisa M. Bitel's extraordinary excavation of pre-modern women's lives... is useful and fascinating.... Male-authored medieval texts provide access to prevailing gender ideologies and at the same time reflect anxieties about how these ideologies were threatened by the productive reality of women's lives.... As Bitel shows in her beautifully written account, early Ireland witnessed a wide range and flexibility in gender relations.

Doris Edel

An overview of this kind is not an easy undertaking... If by provoking the specialists Bitel gives an impulse to the indispensible groundwork, she fully deserves our gratitude.

From the Publisher

It is refreshing to read in a book by a woman on medieval women that not all clerics hated women and that not all men were oversexed villains consciously bent on exploiting women. Bitel challenges not only the medieval Irish male construct of female behavior, but she is also courageous enough to question constructs of medieval women invented by modern Irish medieval historians.

Eavan Boland

This book disperses the shadows in an obscure but important landscape. Lisa Bitel addresses both the history of women in early Ireland and the history of myth, legend, and superstition which surrounded them. It is a powerful and exact book and an invaluable addition to our expanding sense of Ireland through the eyes of Irish women.

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