HISTORY 310
DAUGHTERS OF EVE, SISTERS OF MARY: WOMEN IN THE MIDDLE AGES
 


 

SCHEDULE OF CLASSES AND READINGS





August 19: Introduction to the Course: Women, Gender, and the Body
August 21: The Legacy of the Ancient World: Medical, Legal, and Religious
        Secondary Source Reading:
                  Bitel, 1-30
                  Gendering the Master Narrative (abbrev. GMN): Mary Erler and
                                Maryanne Kowaleski, “A new economy of power relations:
                                female agency in the Middle Ages”
                  Reserve Room: Joyce Salisbury, “Gendered Sexuality,” in Handbook of
                                Medieval Sexuality, 81-102
        Primary Source Readings:
                 Amt, 29-35
                 Online text: Aristotle and Galen on the Nature, Biology and Social Position of Women
                                 (http://www.uncg.edu/~rebarton/ancient-women.htm)

August 26: Christian Heritage: the Bible and St Paul
August 28: St. Augustine, St. Jerome, and Female Asceticism
         Secondary Source Readings:
                  Bitel, 30-45
         Primary Source Readings:
                  Amt, 13-28
                  Online texts: Biblical and Early Christian Authorities
                                     (http://www.uncg.edu/~rebarton/biblical-women.htm)

September 2: Merovingian Society
DUE: Research Topics and Initial Questions (1 Paragraph)
September 4: Merovingian Queens
         Secondary Source Reading:
                  Bitel, 45-94
                  GMN: Jo Ann McNamara, “Women and power through the family revisited”
         Primary Source Readings:
                  Amt, 38-49, 121-129
                  Online text: Gregory of Tours on Frankish Queens (http://www.uncg.edu/~rebarton/frankish-queens.htm)

September 9: Sainted Women of the Dark Ages
September 11: Saint Radegund
DUE: Analytical Essay 1: Gender as a Tool of Analysis
         Secondary Source Reading:
                  Bitel, 95-153
                  GMN: Jocelyn Wogan-Browne, “Powers of record, powers of example: hagiography and
                                women's history”
         Primary Source Readings:
                  Amt, 219-233
                  Reserve Room: Two Lives of St. Radegund, pp. 60-105 in Sainted Women of the Dark Ages,
                                ed. Jo Ann McNamara

September 16: Carolingian Marriage and Family; the Case of Lothar and Theutberga
September 18: Changes in Marriage patterns in 10th and 11th centuries
         Secondary Source Reading
                  Bitel, 154-199
                  Reserve Room: Stuart Airlie, “Private Bodies and the Body Public: the Divorce Case of Lothar
                                II,” Past and Present 161 (1998), 3-38. (also available electronically through the library)
                 Optional Secondary Source: Reserve Room: Gies and Gies, 121-132
         Primary Source Reading
                  Online text: The Case of Emperor Lothar vs. Empress Theutberga
                            (http://www.uncg.edu/~rebarton/theutberga.html)
                  Online texts: Church Reform: Clerical Marriage and Misogynist Propaganda
                             (http://www.uncg.edu/~rebarton/churchreform.htm)

September 23: Debate Preparation
September 25: Debate

September 30: Aristocratic Women
DUE: Analytical Essay 2: Argument Essay
October 2: Women and Chivalry: Eleanor of Aquitaine
         Secondary Source Reading:
                  Bitel, 266-297
                  Optional: Reserve Room: Gies, 121-133
         Primary Source Readings:
                  Amt, 53-60, 152-157
                  Online texts: Norman Noblewomen of the Eleventh Century
                            (http://www.uncg.edu/~rebarton/normanwomen.htm)
 

October 7: Women and Romance: Marie de France and Chretien de Troyes
October 9: “The Frailer Sex:” Hildegard of Bingen and Womanhood
Oct 10: Last Day to Drop without Penalty
         Primary Source Readings:
                  Amt, 233-235 (letter of Hildegard)
                  Reserve Room: Marie de France, “Le Fresne”, pp. 73-91 in The Lais of Marie de France,
                                trans. Robert Hanning and Joan Ferrante (1978)

October 14: FALL BREAK
October 18: Abelard and Heloise
         Secondary Source:
                  Reserve Room: Catherine Brown, “Muliebriter: Doing Gender in the Letters of Heloise,” in
                              Gender and Text in the Later Middle Ages, ed. Jane Chance (Gainesville: University
                                Press of Florida, 1996), 25-51.
         Primary Sources:
                The Letters of Abelard and Heloise, pp. 57-106, 109-156, 159-179
                  The Lost love letters? (TBA if used at all)

October 21: Debate Prep
October 23: Debate

October 28: Gendered Definitions of Sexuality and Gender: the Rise of Canon Law
 DUE: Bibliography
 DUE: Analytical Essay 3: Critique of a Secondary Source
October 30:  Working Women, 1: Peasants
         Secondary Source Reading:
                  Reserve Room: Christopher Brooke, “Marriage in Law and Practice,” in Brooke, The Medieval
                                Idea of Marriage (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989), 119-143.
                  Reserve Room: James Brundage, “Sex and Canon Law,” in Handbook of Medieval Sexuality,
                                 33-50.
                  GMN: Katherine French, “Women in the late medieval English parish”
        Primary Source Reading:
                  Amt, Amt, 79-94 (marriage law), 136-141 (Markyate), 179-193 (agriculture and peasants)

November 4: NO CLASS: Instructor at conference
November 6: Sexuality and Women
         Secondary Source Readings:
                  Ruth Karras, Common Women: Prostitution and Sexuality in Medieval England, intro, 1-83

November 11: Sexuality and Women, part 2
November 13: Working Women, 2: Townswomen
         Secondary Source Readings:
                  Ruth Karras, Common Women: Prostitution and Sexuality in Medieval England, 83-end
                  Reserve Room: Martha Howell, “Citizenship and Gender: Women’s Political Status in Northern
                               Medieval Cities,” in Women and Power, 37-60
         Primary Source Reading:
                  Amt, 194-215 (towns)

November 18: Women and the Virgin: mother, sister, goddess?
November 20: Female Piety and Spirituality: Catherine of Siena
         Secondary Source Reading:
                  GMN: Pamela Sheingorn, “‘The wise mother’: the image of St. Anne teaching the Virgin Mary”
                  GMN: Wendy Larson: “Who is the master of this narrative? Maternal patronage of the cult of St.
                                Margaret”
                  GMN: Barbara Newman, “Did goddesses empower women? the case of Dame Nature”
                  Reserve Room: Caroline Walker Bynum, “Fast, Feast and Flesh: the Religious Significance of Food
                                to Medieval Women,” in Representations 11 (1985), 1-25.
         Primary Source Readings:
                  Online texts: The Cult of the Virgin (http://www.uncg.edu/~rebarton/cultofvirgin.htm)
                  Online text: A Letter of Catherine of Siena (http://www.uncg.edu/~rebarton/cathsienaletter.htm)

November 25: Women and Literature: Christine of Pizan
 DUE: First Draft of Research Paper
         Primary Source Reading:
                  Reserve Room: Christine de Pisan, selections from her work (Willard, The Writings, ix-xv, 137-
                                144, 151-161, 171-212)
November 27: Thanksgiving Break

December 2: Margery Kempe
December 4: Joan of Arc and the politics of gender
         Secondary Sources:
                GMN: Felicity Riddy, “Looking closely: authority and intimacy in the late medieval urban home”
                  Reserve Room: Anthony Goodman, “The Piety of The Book of Margery Kempe,” 100-126 in
                                Goodman, Margery Kempe and Her World
         Primary Sources:
                  On-line: The Life and Trial of Joan of Arc (http://www.uncg.edu/~rebarton/joanofarc.htm)

Monday December 8: Final Drafts of Research Papers Due in My Office by Noon

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