
Women from the Golden Legend: Female Authority in a Medieval Castilian Sanctoral First Edition. Hardback. Edition
Author(s): Emma Gatland (Author)
- Publisher: Tamesis Books
- Publication Date: 20 Oct. 2011
- Edition: First Edition. Hardback.
- Language: English
- Print length: 266 pages
- ISBN-10: 1855662299
- ISBN-13: 9781855662292
Book Description
Hagiography was one of the most prolific narrative genres in the Middle Ages. Jacobus de Voragine’s Golden Legend (c. 1260), the most popular compendium, was translated into every language in Western Europe. In the medieval Iberian peninsula, the number of conserved hagiographic documents dwarfs those belonging to other narrative genres. This book examines one collection of saints’ lives, or sanctorals, and the twenty-five female saints witnessed therein. Their lives furnished exemplary models for women inside and outside the Church, and tell stories of maidens tortured by pagan sovereigns, prostitutes, mothers who see their sons martyred, and women who dress as men in order to avoid being married off to the nearest suitor. This study challenges an understanding of these women as passive recipients of social and spiritual influence by re-situating female authority within the context of vision, language, and performativity. Included in the study are transcriptions of twenty-two previously unedited lives.
Emma Gatland is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow, University of Cambridge.
Editorial Reviews
Review
Gatland shows herself a balanced, observant, and entertaining interpreter of this material, which, perhaps more than any other medieval subject-matter, is still rendered acutely difficult by unresolved textual indeterminacy. THE CATHOLIC HISTORICAL REVIEW, February 2014
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