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Grief, Gender, and Identity in the Middle Ages

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This edited collection examines the ways in which medieval grief is both troubled and troubling––troubled in its representation, troubling to categories such as gender, identity, hierarchy, theolog...
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  • 23 December 2021
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This edited collection examines the ways in which medieval grief is both troubled and troubling––troubled in its representation, troubling to categories such as gender, identity, hierarchy, theology, and history, among others. Investigating various instantiations of grief—sorrow, sadness, and mourning; weeping and lamentation; spiritual and theological disorientation and confusion; keening and the drinking of blood; and grief-madness—through a number of theoretical lenses, including feminist, gender, and queer theories, as well as philosophical, sociological, and historical approaches to emotion, the collected essays move beyond simply describing how men and women grieve in the Middle Ages and begin interrogating the ways grief intersects with and shapes gender identity.
Contributors are Kim Bergqvist, Jim Casey, Danielle Marie Cudmore, Marjorie Housley, Erin. I. Mann, Inna Matyushina, Drew Maxwell, Kristen Mills, Jeffery G. Stoyanoff, Lee Templeton, and Kisha G. Tracy.
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Price: $196.00
Pages: 296
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Explorations in Medieval Culture
Publication Date: 23 December 2021
ISBN: 9789004315129
Format: Hardcover
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"The eleven essays collected in Grief, Gender, and Identity in the Middle Ages offer new insights into the history of emotions in medieval lyric, drama, romance, hagiography, and historiography [...] the essays in the volume make a coherent whole, a credit to both contributors and editor [...] Taken as a whole, the collection offers a valuable account of the intersection of gender and the practices and representations of grief on the northern and western edges of medieval Latin Europe [...] It is a worthy and necessary addition to the scholarly literature on grief and gender." Spencer Strub, in The Medieval Review, 22.05.15. See the full review here.
Lee Templeton (Ph.D., 2006) is Associate Professor of English at North Carolina Wesleyan College. His work has appeared in Medieval Perspectives and The Ballad of the Lone Medievalist, and he is the co-editor of New Directions in Medieval Mystical and Devotional Literature: Essays in Honor of Denise N. Baker.