Masculinity in Medieval Europe
D.M. Hadley
Nov 1998, Paperback, 296 pagesISBN13: 9780582316454
ISBN10: 0582316456
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Description
- Table of Contents
- Features
- Reviews
An original and highly accessible collection of essays which is based on a huge range of historical sources to reveal the realities of mens' lives in the Middle Ages. It covers an impressive geographical range - including essays on Italy, France, Germany and Byzantium - and will span the entire medieval period, from the fourth to the fifteenth century. The collection is divided into four main sections: attaining masculinity; lay men and churchmen: sources of tension; sexuality and the construction of masculinity; and written relationships and social reality.
The contributors are:
Dawn Hadley, Jenny Moore, William M. Aird, Jeremy Goldberg, Matthew Bennet, Janet Nelson, Conrad Leyser, Robert Swanson, Patricia Cullum, Ross Balzaretti, Shaun Tougher, Julian Haseldine, Marianne Ailes and Mark Chinca.
- Description
Table of Contents
- Features
- Reviews
Introduction
1. Medieval Masculinities?
PART ONE: ATTAINING MASCULINITY.
2. `Death maketh the man': The construction of masculinity in the early Middle Ages.
3. Frustrated masculinity: The relationship between William the Conqueror and his eldest son.
4. Masters and men in later medieval England.
5. The masculine military ethos c. 1050-1250.
Part TWO: LAY MEN AND CHURCH MEN: SOURCES OF TENSION
6. Monks, secular men and masculinity c. 900.
7. `Monks in flux': nocturnal emission and the limits of clerical celibacy in the early Middle Ages.
8. `Angels incarnate': clergy and masculinity from Gregorian Reform to Reformation.
9. Clergy, masculinity and transgression in late medieval England.
PART THREE: SEXUALITY AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF MASCULINITY
10. Men and sex in tenth-century Italy.
11. Images of effeminate men: the case of Byzantine eunuchs.
PART FOUR; WRITTEN RELATIONSHIPS AND SOCIAL REALITY
12. Love, separation and male friendship: words and actions in Saint Anselm's letters to his friends.
13. `The love of a friend lasts forever': the language of male affection in Old French literature - homosocial or homosexual?
14. `Women and hunting-birds are easy to tame': aristocratic masculinity and the early German love-lyric.
- Description
- Table of Contents
Features
- Reviews
- Addresses key themes - the plurality of masculinities, changes over time and across regions, and the significance of variables such as age in the construction of masculinities.
- Contains a general introduction by Dawn Hadley, in which she will review gender theory, and the current state of scholarship.
- Covers an increasingly vogue subject -the construction of masculinity.
- Interdisciplinary market for courses on medieval history and literature.
- Description
- Table of Contents
- Features
Reviews
