This work examines the literary English traditions of four Virgin Martyrs: Agatha of Catania, Agnes of Rome, Juliana of Nicomedia, and Katherine of Alexandria. The primary focus surrounds the narratological developments and alterations of these women’s sex-specific or -emphasized tortures. In addition to torments, other details, which may not initially appear sex-specific in nature, are also considered. As recent scholarship has shown, Virgin Martyrs’ lives tend to conform to a relatively standardized core narrative by the later Middle Ages. This study considers to what extent the lives of these four saints actually conform and to what extent they retain individualism despite this homogenizing trend. An analysis of each narrative’s pr...
This dissertation explores literary representations of virgin martyrs in England from the thirteenth...
This dissertation considers as cultural artifacts surviving manuscripts of legendaries (collections ...
The Latin word virago, in its simplest definition, means “a man-like, warrior woman.” For Christian ...
The hagiographic narration of popular legends by Jacobus Voragine in the Golden Legend has had a wid...
Late medieval devotional practice adapted the Roman martyr\u27s standard—in which physical suffering...
This doctoral dissertation aims at describing the representation of holy harlots (Mary Magdalene, Ma...
'Passio' of the virgin martyr were extremely popular in the medieval world, providing a model and in...
Medieval manuscripts concerning the daily lives and miraculous experiences of living saints contain ...
This study examines the relationship of women's bodies to their speech in English virgin martyr lege...
An important concern in these Lives is the conflict between the flesh and the spirit. Virginity in p...
At the center of Anglo-Saxon life was a thriving religious culture, which—in one of its most vibrant...
This thesis examines the construction of the female saint and female sanctity in Ælfric’s Lives of S...
One of the most peculiar developments of the wave of women's spirituality that swept across Europe d...
In medieval English literature, this acute male perspective often lead to a lack of females being re...
A corpus of Anglo-French hagiography composed between 1135 and 1220 tells the lives of Biblical and ...
This dissertation explores literary representations of virgin martyrs in England from the thirteenth...
This dissertation considers as cultural artifacts surviving manuscripts of legendaries (collections ...
The Latin word virago, in its simplest definition, means “a man-like, warrior woman.” For Christian ...
The hagiographic narration of popular legends by Jacobus Voragine in the Golden Legend has had a wid...
Late medieval devotional practice adapted the Roman martyr\u27s standard—in which physical suffering...
This doctoral dissertation aims at describing the representation of holy harlots (Mary Magdalene, Ma...
'Passio' of the virgin martyr were extremely popular in the medieval world, providing a model and in...
Medieval manuscripts concerning the daily lives and miraculous experiences of living saints contain ...
This study examines the relationship of women's bodies to their speech in English virgin martyr lege...
An important concern in these Lives is the conflict between the flesh and the spirit. Virginity in p...
At the center of Anglo-Saxon life was a thriving religious culture, which—in one of its most vibrant...
This thesis examines the construction of the female saint and female sanctity in Ælfric’s Lives of S...
One of the most peculiar developments of the wave of women's spirituality that swept across Europe d...
In medieval English literature, this acute male perspective often lead to a lack of females being re...
A corpus of Anglo-French hagiography composed between 1135 and 1220 tells the lives of Biblical and ...
This dissertation explores literary representations of virgin martyrs in England from the thirteenth...
This dissertation considers as cultural artifacts surviving manuscripts of legendaries (collections ...
The Latin word virago, in its simplest definition, means “a man-like, warrior woman.” For Christian ...