The Life of Christina Mirabilis depicts a series of self-inflicted torments which are seemingly unique in medieval devotional literature in that they leave no outward evidence on her body. This essay examines the self-healing nature of Christina\u27s wounds and the importance of their invisibility in a culture which typically emphasises the visibility of the broken body. It considers the ways in Christina’s resurrected body (in both the Latin (c. 1232) and English (c. 1420) versions of her Life) contributes to thirteenth and fifteenth-century purgatorial and Eucharistic theologies, and suggests a correlation between the bodies of Christina and Christ which allows her body to function as a symbolic Eucharist
This article deals with the Vita Christinae Mirabilis of Thomas of Cantimpré. Christina Mirabilis (o...
This thesis is concerned with the wounds of Christ in devotional images and texts from fifteenth- an...
This article deals with the Vita Christinae Mirabilis of Thomas of Cantimpré. Christina Mirabilis (o...
To date, critics have tended to read late medieval depictions of Christ's bleeding, post-Passion bod...
As Marian devotion rose to prominence in the Latin West after the first millennium, images of the Vi...
As Marian devotion rose to prominence in the Latin West after the first millennium, images of the Vi...
As Marian devotion rose to prominence in the Latin West after the first millennium, images of the Vi...
This thesis explores the manifestations of bodily pain in two visions received by the late medieval ...
This dissertation examines the representation of suffering in medieval affective devotional texts. ...
In seventeenth century narratives of conversion, the body and spirit were seen to be inextricably in...
In The Book of Margery Kempe, the protagonist shifts between identities and geographies as a nomadic...
'The Revelations of Divine Love', composed by Julian of Norwich, reflects the first attempt by a wom...
Around 1580 in Valencia an illiterate female healer, or metgessa, attracted the attention of the Inq...
This thesis is concerned with the wounds of Christ in devotional images and texts from fifteenth- an...
This thesis is concerned with the wounds of Christ in devotional images and texts from fifteenth- an...
This article deals with the Vita Christinae Mirabilis of Thomas of Cantimpré. Christina Mirabilis (o...
This thesis is concerned with the wounds of Christ in devotional images and texts from fifteenth- an...
This article deals with the Vita Christinae Mirabilis of Thomas of Cantimpré. Christina Mirabilis (o...
To date, critics have tended to read late medieval depictions of Christ's bleeding, post-Passion bod...
As Marian devotion rose to prominence in the Latin West after the first millennium, images of the Vi...
As Marian devotion rose to prominence in the Latin West after the first millennium, images of the Vi...
As Marian devotion rose to prominence in the Latin West after the first millennium, images of the Vi...
This thesis explores the manifestations of bodily pain in two visions received by the late medieval ...
This dissertation examines the representation of suffering in medieval affective devotional texts. ...
In seventeenth century narratives of conversion, the body and spirit were seen to be inextricably in...
In The Book of Margery Kempe, the protagonist shifts between identities and geographies as a nomadic...
'The Revelations of Divine Love', composed by Julian of Norwich, reflects the first attempt by a wom...
Around 1580 in Valencia an illiterate female healer, or metgessa, attracted the attention of the Inq...
This thesis is concerned with the wounds of Christ in devotional images and texts from fifteenth- an...
This thesis is concerned with the wounds of Christ in devotional images and texts from fifteenth- an...
This article deals with the Vita Christinae Mirabilis of Thomas of Cantimpré. Christina Mirabilis (o...
This thesis is concerned with the wounds of Christ in devotional images and texts from fifteenth- an...
This article deals with the Vita Christinae Mirabilis of Thomas of Cantimpré. Christina Mirabilis (o...