Women's Power in Late Medieval Romance

Women's Power in Late Medieval Romance

by Amy N. Vines
Women's Power in Late Medieval Romance

Women's Power in Late Medieval Romance

by Amy N. Vines

Hardcover

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Overview

A reading of how women's power is asserted and demonstrated in the popular medieval genre of romance.

The cultural and social power of women in the Middle Ages is perhaps hard to trace, with evidence for it scarce. This book argues that medieval romances provide a central, but under-explored, source for and examples of such authority. By reassessing the influence exerted by female characters, in a spectrum that includes both intellectual and chivalric aid and, in some cases, patronage, it considers how they functioned as models of cultural, intellectual, and social authority in medieval literary texts. In addition to examples set by the family connections, socio-political networks, and textual communities in which they lived, this study argues that women also learned methods of influence from the books they read. In texts like Troilus and Criseyde and Partonope of Blois, the female reader encounters an explicit demonstration of how a woman‘s intellectual and financial resources can be used. The literary representations of women's cultural power expose a continuum of influence from non-material effects to material sway in the medieval patronage system, an influence often unacknowledged in strictly historical and extra-literary sources.

Amy N. Vines is Assistant Professor in the Department of English, University of North Carolina-Greensboro.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781843842750
Publisher: BOYDELL & BREWER INC
Publication date: 10/20/2011
Series: ISSN , #15
Pages: 184
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.30(h) x 0.70(d)

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations viii

Acknowledgements ix

Abbreviations xi

Introduction 1

1 Prophecy as Social Influence: Cassandra, Anne Neville, and the Corpus Christi Manuscript of Troilus and Criseyde 17

2 The Science of Female Power in John Metham's Amoryus and Cleopes 53

3 A Woman's "Crafte": Sexual and Chivalric Patronage in Partonope of Blois 85

4 Creative Revisions: Competing Figures of the Patroness in Thomas Chestre's Sir Launfal 115

Conclusion 141

Bibliography 149

Index 163

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