The present study explores representations of the female reproductive body in medieval written sources, with an emphasis on the figurative language that was used to describe pregnancy, childbirth, menstruation, and lactation when these phenomena take place in the female body and, symbolically, in male bodies. This examination of what are herein labeled “maternal metaphors” in men, that is a comparison between a male subject and an attribute specific to women’s reproductive bodies, reveals how anatomical and physiological characteristics exclusive to the female reproductive body were used to convey descriptive meaning, and considers why and in what contexts such comparisons were made. This study looks at ancient and medieval medical writing,...
The medieval English romance The King of Tars gives an account of a birth of a lump of flesh. This h...
This study proposes that performative rituals-that is, verbal and physical acts that reiterate prior...
The female act of childbirth was deemed grotesque and an unsuitable subject for medieval Christian a...
The present study explores representations of the female reproductive body in medieval written sourc...
Pregnancy and childbirth is a biologically and socially constructed event which shaped the lives of ...
The Jews in Western Europe during the middle ages were often perceived as distinct from other people...
The female body has long been a contested site of conflict between the sexes, and it has been manipu...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
Medieval manuscripts concerning the daily lives and miraculous experiences of living saints contain ...
In this project I examine eighteenth-century literary representations of the pregnant or birthing fe...
Combining a variety of sources including medical treatises, archaeology, charms, hagiography, devoti...
This paper analyses two metaphors used to explain reproduction in Spain's popular medical literature...
Este trabajo examina distintas visiones sobre el cuerpo femenino que articulan los textos hebreos me...
This paper critically analyzes literary representations of greensickness and menstruation in Early M...
The chance of dying in pregnancy or childbirth was very real for medieval women, and still is in man...
The medieval English romance The King of Tars gives an account of a birth of a lump of flesh. This h...
This study proposes that performative rituals-that is, verbal and physical acts that reiterate prior...
The female act of childbirth was deemed grotesque and an unsuitable subject for medieval Christian a...
The present study explores representations of the female reproductive body in medieval written sourc...
Pregnancy and childbirth is a biologically and socially constructed event which shaped the lives of ...
The Jews in Western Europe during the middle ages were often perceived as distinct from other people...
The female body has long been a contested site of conflict between the sexes, and it has been manipu...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
Medieval manuscripts concerning the daily lives and miraculous experiences of living saints contain ...
In this project I examine eighteenth-century literary representations of the pregnant or birthing fe...
Combining a variety of sources including medical treatises, archaeology, charms, hagiography, devoti...
This paper analyses two metaphors used to explain reproduction in Spain's popular medical literature...
Este trabajo examina distintas visiones sobre el cuerpo femenino que articulan los textos hebreos me...
This paper critically analyzes literary representations of greensickness and menstruation in Early M...
The chance of dying in pregnancy or childbirth was very real for medieval women, and still is in man...
The medieval English romance The King of Tars gives an account of a birth of a lump of flesh. This h...
This study proposes that performative rituals-that is, verbal and physical acts that reiterate prior...
The female act of childbirth was deemed grotesque and an unsuitable subject for medieval Christian a...