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Initiates a wider development of inquiries into women's literary
cultures to move the reader beyond single geographical, linguistic,
cultural and period boundaries. Since the closing decades of the
twentieth century, medieval women's writing has been the subject of
energetic conversation and debate. This interest, however, has
focused predominantly on western European writers working within
the Christian tradition: the Saxon visionaries, Mechthild of
Hackeborn, Mechthild of Magdeburg, Gertrude the Great, for example,
and, in England, Julian of Norwich and Margery Kempe are cases in
point. While this present book acknowledges the huge importance of
such writers to women's literary history, it also argues that they
should no longer be read solely within a local context. Instead, by
putting them into conversation with other literary women and their
cultures from wider geographical regions and global cultures -
women from eastern Europe and their books, dramas and music; the
Welsh gwraig llwyn a pherth (woman of bush and brake); the Indian
mystic, Mirabai; Japanese women writers from the Heian period;
women saints from across Christian Europe and those of
eleventh-century Islam or late medieval Ethiopia; for instance -
much more is to be gained in terms of our understanding of the
drivers behind and expressions of medieval women's literary
activities in far broader contexts. This volume considers the
dialogue, synergies, contracts and resonances emerging from such
new alignments, and to help a wider, multidirectional development
of this enquiry into women's literary cultures.
Essays examining the way in which the sea has shaped medieval and
later ideas of what it is to be English. Local and imperial,
insular and expansive, both English yet British: geographically and
culturally, the sea continues to shape changing models of
Englishness. This volume traces the many literary origins of
insular identity from local communities to the entire archipelago,
laying open the continuities and disruptions in the sea's
relationship with English identity in a British context. Ranging
from the beginnings of insular literature to Victorian
medievalisms, the subjects treated include King Arthur's struggle
with muddy banks, the afterlife of Edgar's forged charters, Old
English homilies and narratives of migration, Welsh and English
ideas about Chester, Anglo-Norman views of the sea in the Vie de St
Edmund and Waldef, post-Conquest cartography, The Book of Margery
Kempe, the works of the Irish Stopford Brooke, and the making of an
Anglo-British identity in Victorian Britain. SEBASTIAN SOBECKI is
Professor of Medieval English Literature and Culture at the
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen. Contributors: Sebastian Sobecki,
Winfried Rudolf, Fabienne Michelet, Catherine A.M. Clarke, Judith
Weiss, Kathy Lavezzo, Alfred Hiatt, Jonathan Hsy, Chris Jones,
Joanne Parker, David Wallace
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