This presentation was made during the session "Body as Social Metaphor: Historical and Pedagogical Perspectives."Abstract of a presentation given at the 2008 Body Project conference at the University of Missouri-Columbia.Throughout the middle ages, women were seen -- and condemned -- as daughters of Eve, representing the flesh and sexual desire. However, women were not left with Eve as their sole role model, since Eve has an exact opposite in the person of the Virgin Mary. Mary, like Christ, could serve to redeem her followers, and her purity could undo the effects of Eve's sin. For women trapped in their fleshliness by the sin of Eve, Mary provided a way out; by living as virgins they could affiliate themselves with the Mother of God, rath...
The BA thesis will concentrate on the comprehension of the female body in early modern England, dati...
This dissertation examines the complex interrelations between incarnation theology and notions of t...
During the medieval and early modern periods in England, women were not expected to enter into the r...
Extant in seven 14th- and 15th-century Middle English manuscripts, the apocryphal Life of Adam and E...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [337]-351).In focusing on the negative patristic attitude...
The female body has long been a contested site of conflict between the sexes, and it has been manipu...
Thesis (M.A., History (Humanities)) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2009.Religious women...
This study examines the relationship of women's bodies to their speech in English virgin martyr lege...
The virgin Mary and Eve constitute two opposite sexual poles in the way Christian discourse has appr...
One of the most peculiar developments of the wave of women's spirituality that swept across Europe d...
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...
My work explores the importance and presence of the female body in medieval religious practice as ex...
By the Middle Ages, women's roles as defined by the Church were strictly circumscribed; however, alt...
As Marian devotion rose to prominence in the Latin West after the first millennium, images of the Vi...
The BA thesis will concentrate on the comprehension of the female body in early modern England, dati...
This dissertation examines the complex interrelations between incarnation theology and notions of t...
During the medieval and early modern periods in England, women were not expected to enter into the r...
Extant in seven 14th- and 15th-century Middle English manuscripts, the apocryphal Life of Adam and E...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [337]-351).In focusing on the negative patristic attitude...
The female body has long been a contested site of conflict between the sexes, and it has been manipu...
Thesis (M.A., History (Humanities)) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2009.Religious women...
This study examines the relationship of women's bodies to their speech in English virgin martyr lege...
The virgin Mary and Eve constitute two opposite sexual poles in the way Christian discourse has appr...
One of the most peculiar developments of the wave of women's spirituality that swept across Europe d...
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...
My work explores the importance and presence of the female body in medieval religious practice as ex...
By the Middle Ages, women's roles as defined by the Church were strictly circumscribed; however, alt...
As Marian devotion rose to prominence in the Latin West after the first millennium, images of the Vi...
The BA thesis will concentrate on the comprehension of the female body in early modern England, dati...
This dissertation examines the complex interrelations between incarnation theology and notions of t...
During the medieval and early modern periods in England, women were not expected to enter into the r...