This project strives to decouple the 12th century writer Heloise d’Argenteuil from her husband, the notorious Peter Abelard, establishing her as a significant thinker and writer, particularly in the tradition of women’s literature. Heloise, in fact, anticipated the querelle des femme of a later medieval scholar, Christine de Pizan, as she sought to combat stereotypical thinking about women within the circumscribed role of a devoted lover and wife to Abelard. Drawing on the work of Sally Livingston and others, I will examine various medieval discourses. In her letters, Heloise is revealed as a figure aspiring to be viewed not as a wife succumbing to a man, but rather as a woman devoting her mind, body, and future to her husband. Thus, this p...
Alisoun of Bath has long been considered one of Chaucer’s most memorable characters, both for her ca...
This chapter presents Heloise of Argenteuil’s quest for an intellectual voice through her correspond...
This paper focuses on two related moments of hybridity in late medieval conduct literature concerned...
The scandal surrounding Peter Abelard and Heloise’s love story has eclipsed the depth of their indiv...
Gender/sex relation in Western Europe during the Middle Age was dominated by man/woman hierarchy bas...
honors thesisCollege of HumanitiesWorld Languages & CulturesMargaret M. ToscanoThis thesis examines ...
This disccusion of the case of Heloise, within an interdisciplinary symposium on memory, was also th...
This dissertation analyzed the flourishing of imitative versions of Heloise and Abelard's love corre...
Thesis advisor: Robert StantonAn exploration of sex and marriage and its role in the writings of thr...
Specialiter: A Theological Hermeneutic in the Letters of Heloise It is possible to read both the lov...
The aim of this paper is to examine how religion and monasticism are treated in some literary retell...
Heloise of the Paraclete has appeared in the volumes of Tjurunga several times over the years. Never...
Heloise was born in 1100 and died in 1163. She lived during what is known as the twelfth century ren...
In her fourth letter to Abelard, Heloise asks the question, Oh what will become of us obedient ones...
The Wife of Bath is undoubtedly one of the most fascinating of the Canterbury pilgrims. At the same ...
Alisoun of Bath has long been considered one of Chaucer’s most memorable characters, both for her ca...
This chapter presents Heloise of Argenteuil’s quest for an intellectual voice through her correspond...
This paper focuses on two related moments of hybridity in late medieval conduct literature concerned...
The scandal surrounding Peter Abelard and Heloise’s love story has eclipsed the depth of their indiv...
Gender/sex relation in Western Europe during the Middle Age was dominated by man/woman hierarchy bas...
honors thesisCollege of HumanitiesWorld Languages & CulturesMargaret M. ToscanoThis thesis examines ...
This disccusion of the case of Heloise, within an interdisciplinary symposium on memory, was also th...
This dissertation analyzed the flourishing of imitative versions of Heloise and Abelard's love corre...
Thesis advisor: Robert StantonAn exploration of sex and marriage and its role in the writings of thr...
Specialiter: A Theological Hermeneutic in the Letters of Heloise It is possible to read both the lov...
The aim of this paper is to examine how religion and monasticism are treated in some literary retell...
Heloise of the Paraclete has appeared in the volumes of Tjurunga several times over the years. Never...
Heloise was born in 1100 and died in 1163. She lived during what is known as the twelfth century ren...
In her fourth letter to Abelard, Heloise asks the question, Oh what will become of us obedient ones...
The Wife of Bath is undoubtedly one of the most fascinating of the Canterbury pilgrims. At the same ...
Alisoun of Bath has long been considered one of Chaucer’s most memorable characters, both for her ca...
This chapter presents Heloise of Argenteuil’s quest for an intellectual voice through her correspond...
This paper focuses on two related moments of hybridity in late medieval conduct literature concerned...