The following paper examines Sir Walter Scott’s historical novel, Ivanhoe, which was published in 1814, in terms of the social attitudes persisting during the Middle Ages when the novel takes place. Specifically, the paper analyzes Rebecca, a multi-faceted and subtly heroic character, by placing her into historical context and using the relevant social attitudes to inform her accusation as a witch. Throughout Ivanhoe, Rebecca’s perception as a witch is compounded by her identities as a medical healer, a woman, and a Jew, which accurately reflects the attitudes towards these identities that existed during the European witch hunt in the Middle Ages. Rebecca’s position as a medical healer would warrant suspicion due to her lack of formal medic...
This chapter explores the ways in which medievalism gave intellectual and politically astute women t...
The purpose of this study was to determine if and to what extent nineteenth-century British women wr...
The attempt here is to understand the social conditions and processes through which witches were lab...
The following paper examines Sir Walter Scott’s historical novel, Ivanhoe, which was published in 18...
The following paper examines Sir Walter Scott’s historical novel, Ivanhoe, which was published in 18...
The following paper examines Sir Walter Scott’s historical novel, Ivanhoe, which was published in 18...
Statement of the Problem: Since the mid-twentieth century, scholarship on European witchcraft has pr...
Scott's Ivanhoe is more than a literary landmark or relic.The ideologicai work done by the novel has...
Scott's Ivanhoe is more than a literary landmark or relic.The ideologicai work done by the novel has...
This project documents and analyzes the gendered transformation of magical figures occurring in Arth...
For medieval audiences women occupied a specific, designated cultural area which, while they could ...
This essay investigates the question of how women were used as scapegoats for male impotence during ...
This paper analyzes how literature produced during the early modern period fictionalized the identit...
For medieval audiences women occupied a specific, designated cultural area which, while they could ...
Misogyny was always present in Medieval Culture, but in the late Middle Ages, it became more virulen...
This chapter explores the ways in which medievalism gave intellectual and politically astute women t...
The purpose of this study was to determine if and to what extent nineteenth-century British women wr...
The attempt here is to understand the social conditions and processes through which witches were lab...
The following paper examines Sir Walter Scott’s historical novel, Ivanhoe, which was published in 18...
The following paper examines Sir Walter Scott’s historical novel, Ivanhoe, which was published in 18...
The following paper examines Sir Walter Scott’s historical novel, Ivanhoe, which was published in 18...
Statement of the Problem: Since the mid-twentieth century, scholarship on European witchcraft has pr...
Scott's Ivanhoe is more than a literary landmark or relic.The ideologicai work done by the novel has...
Scott's Ivanhoe is more than a literary landmark or relic.The ideologicai work done by the novel has...
This project documents and analyzes the gendered transformation of magical figures occurring in Arth...
For medieval audiences women occupied a specific, designated cultural area which, while they could ...
This essay investigates the question of how women were used as scapegoats for male impotence during ...
This paper analyzes how literature produced during the early modern period fictionalized the identit...
For medieval audiences women occupied a specific, designated cultural area which, while they could ...
Misogyny was always present in Medieval Culture, but in the late Middle Ages, it became more virulen...
This chapter explores the ways in which medievalism gave intellectual and politically astute women t...
The purpose of this study was to determine if and to what extent nineteenth-century British women wr...
The attempt here is to understand the social conditions and processes through which witches were lab...