
Women Intellectuals and Leaders in the Middle Ages
Kerby-Fulton, Professor Kathryn, Bugyis, Professor Katie Ann-Marie, Van Engen, J More by this author...£34.99- History
- Social Justice
- Feminism
- Europe (Including Great Britain)
- Europe
Wide-ranging examination of women's achievements in and influence on many aspects of medieval culture. Medieval women were normally denied access to public educational institutions, and so also denied the gateways to most leadership positions. Modern scholars have therefore tended to study learned medieval women as simply anomalies, and women generally as victims.
This volume, however, argues instead for a via media. Drawing upon manuscript and archival sources, scholars here show that more medieval women attained some form of learning than hitherto imagined, and that women with such legal, social or ecclesiastical knowledge also often exercised professional or communal leadership. Bringing together contributors from the disciplines of literature, history and religion, this volume challenges several traditional views: firstly, the still-prevalent idea that women's intellectual accomplishments were limited to the Latin literate.