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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited The Maternal Performance of the Virgin Mary in the Old English Advent in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoThroughout the Christian era, literary and artistic representations of the Virgin Mary have been manipulated by a variety of ideologies, religious or political, to define the appropriate positioning and agency of the feminine in a culture. The culture of Anglo-Saxon England, like most others, almost always presented Mary in positive terms,…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited The Maternal Performance of the Virgin Mary in the Old English Advent in the group
Anglo-Saxon / Old English on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoThroughout the Christian era, literary and artistic representations of the Virgin Mary have been manipulated by a variety of ideologies, religious or political, to define the appropriate positioning and agency of the feminine in a culture. The culture of Anglo-Saxon England, like most others, almost always presented Mary in positive terms,…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited Female Community in the Old English Judith in the group
LLC Old English on MLA Commons 8 years, 8 months agoLike most female characters in Old English poetry, Judith from the Old English poem of the same name has been subject to much scrutiny in recent years. She has been read as a figure of Mother Church, or as a Germanic warrior, or as a warning against rape. Yet Judith’s relationship with her maid, the focus of my analysis of Judith, has been elided;…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited Female Community in the Old English Judith in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoLike most female characters in Old English poetry, Judith from the Old English poem of the same name has been subject to much scrutiny in recent years. She has been read as a figure of Mother Church, or as a Germanic warrior, or as a warning against rape. Yet Judith’s relationship with her maid, the focus of my analysis of Judith, has been elided;…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited Female Community in the Old English Judith in the group
Anglo-Saxon / Old English on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoLike most female characters in Old English poetry, Judith from the Old English poem of the same name has been subject to much scrutiny in recent years. She has been read as a figure of Mother Church, or as a Germanic warrior, or as a warning against rape. Yet Judith’s relationship with her maid, the focus of my analysis of Judith, has been elided;…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited Old English Literature and Feminist Theory: A State of the Field in the group
TC Women’s and Gender Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoFeminist and gender scholars working in Anglo-Saxon studies in the past ten years have been asking new and important questions of a variety of Old English and Anglo-Latin texts. Most crucially, this interdisciplinary new work redefines the historiographical paradigms of Anglo-Saxon cultural production and reception so that women must now be…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited Old English Literature and Feminist Theory: A State of the Field in the group
LLC Old English on MLA Commons 8 years, 8 months agoFeminist and gender scholars working in Anglo-Saxon studies in the past ten years have been asking new and important questions of a variety of Old English and Anglo-Latin texts. Most crucially, this interdisciplinary new work redefines the historiographical paradigms of Anglo-Saxon cultural production and reception so that women must now be…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited Old English Literature and Feminist Theory: A State of the Field in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoFeminist and gender scholars working in Anglo-Saxon studies in the past ten years have been asking new and important questions of a variety of Old English and Anglo-Latin texts. Most crucially, this interdisciplinary new work redefines the historiographical paradigms of Anglo-Saxon cultural production and reception so that women must now be…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited Old English Literature and Feminist Theory: A State of the Field in the group
Anglo-Saxon / Old English on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoFeminist and gender scholars working in Anglo-Saxon studies in the past ten years have been asking new and important questions of a variety of Old English and Anglo-Latin texts. Most crucially, this interdisciplinary new work redefines the historiographical paradigms of Anglo-Saxon cultural production and reception so that women must now be…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited The Middle English Verse of Boston Public Library MS 124 in the group
TC Women’s and Gender Studies on MLA Commons 8 years, 8 months agoAbstract: This short edition makes available for the first time three Middle English verse prayers to Christ from the Mohun Hours, a fourteenth-century Book of Hours held by the Boston Public Library (MS 124). Late medieval Books of Hours have received substantial recent critical attention as expressions of devotional literacy practiced mainly by…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited Historical sources of the Middle English verse life of St. AEthelthryth in the group
TC Women’s and Gender Studies on MLA Commons 8 years, 8 months agoHistorical source study of the last text in the composite manuscript Lon- don, BL Cotton Faustina B.iii can shed light on the transmission and use of chronicle texts and their translations in late medieval England. The author of the Middle English verse Life of St. Æthelthryth used John Trevisa’s English translation of Ranulf Higden’s Poly…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited The St. Edith Cycle in the Salisbury Breviary on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months ago
The manuscript now called the Salisbury Breviary (Paris, Bibliotheque Nationale de France, MS lat. 17294) contains the only extant illustrated cycle of of the Life of St Edith of Wilton; the fifteen miniatures accompany the readings for the feast of St Edith. These images emphasize the connections among Edith’s holiness, royal genealogy, and…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited The eadgiþ Erasure: A Gloss on the Old English Andreas on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months ago
A half-erased woman’s name is partially legible at the bottom of folio 41 verso of the Anglo-Saxon manuscript we now call the Vercelli Book. Edith – eadgiþ – provides mystery as highly unusual marginalia, an individual name added to and then erased from the manuscript. I argue here that the erased name eadgiþ is direct reference to St. Edith o…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited Beowulf’s Tears of Fatherhood on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months ago
The figure of Hrothgar, aging king of the Danes, forces an analysis of the relationships among age, maleness, and masculinity in Beowulf. Masculine characters, while enacting the poem’s complex reciprocities and social transactions in the hall and on the battlefield, accrue status and power through assertions of control and dominance, through…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited The Feminized Cross of the Dream of the Rood on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months ago
The performances of Christ in the text of The Dream of the Rood construct a masculinity for Christ that is majestic, martial, and specifically heterosexual and that relies on a fragile opposition with a femininity defined as dominated Other in the figure of the Cross. His particularly constructed masculinity, explored rather than merely assumed or…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited Mary Bateson (1865-1906): Scholar and Suffragist on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months ago
An entry in the Women Medievalists and the Academy collection, this brief biography presents Cambridge historian Mary Bateson, scholar and suffragist, who lived on the cusp of the opportunity for academic professionalization for women. Her life illustrates an inspiring blend of serious scholarship, accessible publication, and devoted political…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited The Masculine Queen of Beowulf on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months ago
Traditional equation of women with the feminine and men with the masculine is disrupted when Beowulf is read within the rubric of gender performance as determined by Judith Butler in Gender Trouble and Bodies that Matter. Performativity enables a new way of interpreting the characters of Beowulf; specifically, in the world of the poem masculinity…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited The Maternal Performance of the Virgin Mary in the Old English Advent on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months ago
Throughout the Christian era, literary and artistic representations of the Virgin Mary have been manipulated by a variety of ideologies, religious or political, to define the appropriate positioning and agency of the feminine in a culture. The culture of Anglo-Saxon England, like most others, almost always presented Mary in positive terms,…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited Female Community in the Old English Judith on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months ago
Like most female characters in Old English poetry, Judith from the Old English poem of the same name has been subject to much scrutiny in recent years. She has been read as a figure of Mother Church, or as a Germanic warrior, or as a warning against rape. Yet Judith’s relationship with her maid, the focus of my analysis of Judith, has been elided;…[Read more]
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Mary Dockray-Miller deposited The Feminized Cross of The Dream of the Rood on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months ago
When the Vercelli Book is examined within the horizon of contemporary women’s studies and feminist theory, it can be described as a manuscript intended for a specifically female reader to be read as part of her private religious practice. This essay focuses on The Dream of the Rood, the most canonical of the poems in the manuscript.
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