Bodytalk : when women speak in Old French literature

cover image

Where to find it

Davis Library (7th floor)

Call Number
PQ155.W6 B87 1993
Status
Available

North Carolina Collection (Wilson Library)

Call Number
C378 UMb967.1
Status
In-Library Use Only

Authors, etc.

Names:

Summary

Contemporary feminist readers have argued that old French literary representations of women--from the excessively beautiful lady of courtly romance to the lascivious shrew of fabliau and farce--are the products of misogynous male imagination and fantasy.

In Bodytalk , E. Jane Burns contends that female protagonists in medieval texts authored by men can be heard to talk back against the stereotyped and codified roles that their fictive anatomy is designed to convey. She investigates key moments in which the words of these medieval "women" dissent from and significantly restructure the conceptions of female sexuality, wifely obedience, courtly love, and adultery that are so often used to define and delimit femininity in the French Middle Ages. Burns provides the feminist reader of medieval literature with a strategy for reinterpreting the female body in its stereotyped, fetishized, and fantasized for. Arguing that the gendered body mattters in our reading of female protagonists, she shows how women characters can rewrite, through their attributed speech, the narratives that define and contain them.

Bodytalk is an incisive, polemical, sophisticated, and often witty book about the gender issues that are raised by the very presence of female characters in male-authored texts. It brings recent feminist theory to bear upon the discussion of medieval texts, and contributes significantly to current feminist criticism by offering historically specific accounts of some of the founding moments of western conceptions of love, desire, and sexuality.

A volume in the New Cultural Studies series.

Contents

  • Preface
  • Introduction: Listening to Bodies Talk
  • Part I Knowing Women
  • Chapter 1 A Close Look at Female
  • Orifices in Farce and Fabliau--Head or Ass?
  • Refocusing the Penis-Eye--Lips or Labia?
  • How Headless Women Speak
  • Chapter 2 A Taste of Knowledge
  • Genesis and Generation in the Jeu d'Adam--Mind Over Matter
  • Why Women Should Be Silent--Matter Before Mind
  • How Women Come First
  • Part II Desiring Ladies
  • Chapter 3 Beauty in the Blindspot
  • Philomena's Talking Hands
  • Chapter 4 Rewriting Men's Stories
  • Enide's Disruptive Mouths
  • Chapter 5 Why Beauty Laughs

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