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Strong Women - Life, Text, and Territory 1347-1645 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,725
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Strong Women - Life, Text, and Territory 1347-1645 (Hardcover)
Series: Clarendon Lectures in English
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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It takes a strong woman to secure bookish remembrance in future
times; to see her life becoming a life. David Wallace explores the
lives of four Catholic women - Dorothea of Montau (1347-1394) and
Margery Kempe of Lynn (c. 1373-c. 1440); Mary Ward of Yorkshire
(1585-1645) and Elizabeth Cary of Drury Lane (c. 1585-1639) and and
the fate of their writings. All four shock, surprise, and court
historical danger. Dorothea of Montau punishes her body and spends
all day in church; eight of her nine neglected children die. Kempe,
mother of fourteen, empties whole churches with a piercing cry
learned at Jerusalem. Ward, living holily but un-immured, is
denounced as an Amazon, a chattering hussy, an Apostolic Virago,
and a galloping girl. Cary, having left her husband torturing
Catholics in Dublin castle, converts to Roman Catholicism in Irish
stables in London. Each of these women is mulier fortis, a strong
woman: had she been otherwise, Wallace argues, her life would never
have been written. The earliest texts of these lives are mostly
near-contemporaneous with the women they represent, but their
public reappearances have been partial and episodic, with their own
complex histories.
The lives of these strong women continue to be rewritten long after
this premodern period. Incipient European war determines what Kempe
must represent between her first discovery in 1934 and full
publication in 1940. Dorothea of Montau, first promoted to counter
eastern paganism, becomes a bastion against Bolshevism in the
1930s; her cult's meaning is fought out between Gunter Grass and
Josef Ratzinger. Cary's Catholic daughters, Benedictine nuns, must
write of their mother as if she were a saint. Ward's work is not
yet done: her followers, having won the right not to be enclosed,
must now enter the closed spaces of Roman clerical power.
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