|
|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
The Vita Christi, written by the abbess Isabel de Villena, is the
only literary work in Catalan to bear the signature of a woman
during the Middle Ages. It represents a fascinating re-evaluation
of the role women played inthe life of Jesus Christ. The Life of
Christ (Vita Christi), written by the abbess Isabel de Villena, is
the only literary work to have been preserved in Catalan and to
bear the signature of a woman during the Middle Ages. It was
composed to provide spiritual direction for the nuns within the
community of Poor Clares which Sor (i.e. Sister) Isabel oversaw at
the Convent of the Holy Trinity in Valencia. The work was only able
to emerge from obscurity by accident. In 1497 Queen Isabel of
Castile, the wife of Ferdinand of Catalonia-Aragon, who had heard
news of the book's existence, asked Sor Isabel's successor for a
copy. The new Abbess, Sor Aldonca, responded by bringing the work
to press. Queen Isabel's interest in Sor Isabel's book was
understandable. The former abbess had been the daughter of the
refined and restless Marquess of Villena, and was herself educated
at Court, a milieu with which she maintained very positive
relations throughout her life. As an abbess, what's more, she
carried out important reforms at the convent and became a valued
and respected figure within the dynamic cultural world of the
Valencia of her day. Isabelde Villena's Vita Christi has often been
interpreted as a response, delivered from the serenity of the
cloister, to the misogyny and satire against the female gender
emanating from certain books written at that time. Sor Isabel's
work is a re-evaluation of the role women played in the life of
Jesus Christ, a role at variance with the subsidiary one ascribed
to them by the majority of commentators. Published in association
with Editorial Barcino, Barcelona.
The first major work of literature written in Catalan and arguably
the first European novel. The Romance of Evast and Blaquerna is a
novel in which Ramon Llull rebelled against secular literature of
chivalry and the court in general, which was so successful in his
time. Written around 1283, it tells the fictional biography of
Blaquerna, a virtuous young man who aspires to be a hermit, not a
knight, but who on encountering the disorder of the world is
obliged to remain in it. In his reform efforts, Blaquerna passes
through several estates before being elected Holy Father in Rome,
allowing him to intervene in all Christendom and work decidedly in
favor of the conversion of infidels. With everyone on the path to
salvation, he may eventually retire and devote himself tothe
contemplative life. In this new situation, Blaquerna wrote the Book
of the Lover and the Beloved, one of the top works of mystical
literature of all time. Published in association with Editorial
Barcino. Ramon Llull (1232-1316) was a mystic, missionary,
philosopher and author of narrative and poetry. He is credited with
writing the first major work of Catalan literature. Robert D.
Hughes is a specialist in medieval Catalan literature and a widely
published translator.
A selection from the works of the Catalan Franciscan, Francesc
Eiximenis. Francesc Eiximenis is an outstanding figure in the ranks
of the mendicant orders who, in the late Middle Ages, strove to
educate the lower echelons of society. Born in Gerona, around 1330,
probably to a comfortable middle-class family, Eiximenis entered
the Franciscan order at a very early age, studied in Oxford, and
probably also in Paris, and obtained the degree of master of
theology in Toulouse. Later he combined teaching with the composing
of his works. Among these stands out the monumental and widely
known Lo Crestia (The Christian), in which Eiximenis aimed to
include all contemporary university knowledge, adapted for a lay
public whose basic level of instruction was far below that of
clerics. The same didactic purpose is seen in the Libro de los
angeles (Book of the Angels), the Libro de las mujeres (Book of the
Women) and the Vita Christi. Eiximenis, by then bishop of Elna,
died in 1409. Among the many themes that recur in his extensive
literary production, this anthology concentrates on his ideas on
the transmission of knowledge, on education and on culture. The
introduction and selection of texts is by David Guixeras and Xavier
Renedo. ROBERT D. HUGHES is a translator and researcher with
particular expertise in the fields of fine art, the history of
ideas and Catalan culture. Published in association with Editorial
Barcino
|
You may like...
Never Too Late
James Cromwell, Dennis Waterman, …
DVD
R298
Discovery Miles 2 980
Captain America
Jack Kirby, Joe Simon, …
Paperback
R672
R604
Discovery Miles 6 040
|