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Fragmentation & Redemption - Essays On Gender & Human Body in Medieval Religion (Paperback, Revised)
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Fragmentation & Redemption - Essays On Gender & Human Body in Medieval Religion (Paperback, Revised)
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1992 American Academy of Religion Award. These seven essays by
noted historian Caroline Walker Bynum exemplify her argument that
historians must write in a "comic" mode, aware of history's
artifice, risks, and incompletion. Exploring a diverse array of
medieval texts, the essays show how women were able to appropriate
dominant social symbols in ways that revised and undercut them,
allowing their own creative and religious voices to emerge. Taken
together, they provide a model of how to account for gender in
studying medieval texts and offer a new interpretation of the role
of asceticism and mysticism in Christianity. In the first three
essays, Bynum focuses on the methodological problems inherent in
the writing of history. She shows that a consideration of medieval
texts written by women and the rituals attractive to them
undermines the approaches of three 20th-century intellectual
figures - Victor Turner, Max Weber, and Leo Steinberg - and
illustrates how other disciplines can enrich historical research.
These methodological considerations are then used in the next three
essays to examine gender proper. While describing the
"experiential" literary voices of medieval women, Bynum underlines
the corporality of women's piety and focuses on both the cultural
construction and the intractable physicality of the body itself.
She also examines how the acts and attitudes of men affected the
cultural construction of categories such as "female," "heretic,"
and "saint" and shows that the study of gender is the study of how
roles and possibilities are conceptualized by both women and men.
In the final essay, Bynum elucidates how medieval discussions of
bodily resurrection and the obsession withmaterial details enrich
modem debates over questions of self-identity and survival.
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