This article demonstrates that the fifteenth-century female mystic Margery Kempe modelled herself on Mary Magdalene in order to gain in authority, using the repentant saint to provide a precedent for the most controversial aspects of her life, notably her public preaching, her constant crying, and her freedom of movement. She also structured her book to parallel the life of the Magdalene, in a bid to be acknowledged by posterity as a saint. and structured her life on that of the repentant saint in order to gain in authority
Book of Margery Kempe, lived—when she was not traveling to the Holy Land or Assisi, the Shrine of St...
The opening sequence of the autobiography, The Book of Margery Kempe, written in approximately 1439,...
Movement in literature is a technique used by authors to uncover richer and deeper meaning which can...
This article demonstrates that the fifteenth-century female mystic Margery Kempe modelled herself on...
Bakhtin viewed the medieval world as two-tiered: an “official” establishment culture maintained the ...
The Book of Margery Kempe is primarily, and most importantly, a manual of spiritual instruction med...
The Book of Margery Kempe is primarily, and most importantly, a manual of spiritual instruction medi...
This article argues that Margery Kempe is presented as an exemplary parishioner and a supporter of h...
In the Book of Margery Kempe, Margery Kempe, a fifteenth-century lay mystic, recorded her spiritual ...
Mary Magdalene is a significant figure in the Christian world, largely due to her unique relationshi...
The Book of Margery Kempe tells the apparently true story of a medieval wife and mother of fourteen ...
This thesis explores the complexities in the mysticism and literary authority of Margery Kempe as th...
This article examines how the engagement with textiles and textile-craft in The Book of Margery Kemp...
This thesis examines Margery Kempe's construction of her 'maner of leuyng', as it shifts back and fo...
Anthony Baleߣs essay takes up recent scholarship on the historicity and production of The Book of Ma...
Book of Margery Kempe, lived—when she was not traveling to the Holy Land or Assisi, the Shrine of St...
The opening sequence of the autobiography, The Book of Margery Kempe, written in approximately 1439,...
Movement in literature is a technique used by authors to uncover richer and deeper meaning which can...
This article demonstrates that the fifteenth-century female mystic Margery Kempe modelled herself on...
Bakhtin viewed the medieval world as two-tiered: an “official” establishment culture maintained the ...
The Book of Margery Kempe is primarily, and most importantly, a manual of spiritual instruction med...
The Book of Margery Kempe is primarily, and most importantly, a manual of spiritual instruction medi...
This article argues that Margery Kempe is presented as an exemplary parishioner and a supporter of h...
In the Book of Margery Kempe, Margery Kempe, a fifteenth-century lay mystic, recorded her spiritual ...
Mary Magdalene is a significant figure in the Christian world, largely due to her unique relationshi...
The Book of Margery Kempe tells the apparently true story of a medieval wife and mother of fourteen ...
This thesis explores the complexities in the mysticism and literary authority of Margery Kempe as th...
This article examines how the engagement with textiles and textile-craft in The Book of Margery Kemp...
This thesis examines Margery Kempe's construction of her 'maner of leuyng', as it shifts back and fo...
Anthony Baleߣs essay takes up recent scholarship on the historicity and production of The Book of Ma...
Book of Margery Kempe, lived—when she was not traveling to the Holy Land or Assisi, the Shrine of St...
The opening sequence of the autobiography, The Book of Margery Kempe, written in approximately 1439,...
Movement in literature is a technique used by authors to uncover richer and deeper meaning which can...