Feminae: Medieval Women and Gender Index


320 Record(s) Found in our database

Search Results

1. Record Number: 44995
Author(s): Savonarola, Michele,
Contributor(s):
Title : A Mother's Manual for the Women of Ferrara: A Fifteenth-Century Guide to Pregnancy and Pediatrics
Source: A Mother's Manual for the Women of Ferrara: A Fifteenth-Century Guide to Pregnancy and Pediatrics. Martin Marafioti, translator.   Edited by Gabriella Zuccolin. The Other Voice in Early Modern Europe: The Toronto Series, 89.   Iter Press, 2022.  Pages 57 - 217.
Year of Publication: 2022.

2. Record Number: 45237
Author(s): Gershom son of Jacob, , and Elisheva Baumgarten
Contributor(s):
Title : Medical Cooperation
Source: Jewish Everyday Life in Medieval Northern Europe, 1080-1350: A Sourcebook.   Edited by Tzafrir Barzilay, Eyal Levinson, and Elisheva Baumgarten. The text is introduced by Elisheva Baumgarten and comes from Sefer Sikhron Brit laRishonim, ed. Avraham Glassberg (Berlin: Fischer, 1892), 142–43. .  2022.  Pages 138 - 139. The book is available open access: https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/mip_teamsdp/9/
Year of Publication: 2022.

3. Record Number: 43583
Author(s): Bailey, Anne E.,
Contributor(s):
Title : The Female Condition: Gender and Deformity in High-Medieval Miracle Narratives
Source: Gender and History , 32., 2 ( 2021):  Pages 427 - 447.
Year of Publication: 2021.

4. Record Number: 43532
Author(s): Keene, Bryan C., and Larisa Grollemond,
Contributor(s):
Title : A Game of Thrones: Power Structures in Medievalisms, Manuscripts, and the Museum
Source: Postmedieval: A Journal of Medieval Cultural Studies , 11., 2- 3 ( 2020):  Pages 326 - 337. Available with a subscription: https://doi.org/10.1057/s41280-020-00173-w
Year of Publication: 2020.

5. Record Number: 43624
Author(s): Smith, Carissa Turner,
Contributor(s):
Title : The Virgin Martyr of Comics: Distributed Agency and Saintly Iconography
Source: Cyborg Saints: Religion and Posthumanism in Middle Grade and Young Adult Fiction Carissa Turner Smith .   Routledge, 2020. Postmedieval: A Journal of Medieval Cultural Studies , 11., 2- 3 ( 2020):  Pages 124 - 158.
Year of Publication: 2020.

6. Record Number: 43992
Author(s): Kaufman, Amy S. and Paul B. Sturtevant,
Contributor(s):
Title : Knights in Shining Armor and Damsels in Distress
Source: The Devil's Historians: How Modern Extremists Abuse the Medieval Past. Amy S. Kaufman and Paul B. Sturtevant .   University of Toronto Press, 2020. Postmedieval: A Journal of Medieval Cultural Studies , 11., 2- 3 ( 2020):  Pages 103 - 125.
Year of Publication: 2020.

7. Record Number: 44618
Author(s): Pinder, Janice,
Contributor(s):
Title : The Religion of the Heart of the Abbey of the Holy Ghost
Source: The Abbaye du Saint Esprit: Spiritual Instruction for Laywomen, 1250-1500. Janice Pinder, translator   Edited by Janice Pinder .   Brepols, 2020. Postmedieval: A Journal of Medieval Cultural Studies , 11., 2- 3 ( 2020):  Pages 139 - 157. Available with a subscription from Brepols: https://doi.org/10.1484/M.MWTC-EB.5.121243
Year of Publication: 2020.

8. Record Number: 44899
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Jacoba Felicie: A Female Physician on Trial
Source: The Intolerant Middle Ages: A Reader.   Edited by Eugene Smelyansky .   University of Toronto Press, 2020. Postmedieval: A Journal of Medieval Cultural Studies , 11., 2- 3 ( 2020):  Pages 229 - 233.
Year of Publication: 2020.

9. Record Number: 44321
Author(s): Lucherini, Vinni
Contributor(s):
Title : Arte medievale e diplomazia culturale italo-ungherese nel Ventennio fascista. Intorno alla tomba di Maria d’Ungheria a Napoli
Source: Romisches Jahrbuch der Bibliotheca Hertziana , 44., ( 2019 - 2020):  Pages 407 - 447.
Year of Publication: 2019 - 2020.

10. Record Number: 42125
Author(s): Gomez, Francisco Sayans,
Contributor(s):
Title : El ciclo de Casiopea en los manuscritos latinos medievales
Source: Revista Digital de Iconografia Medieval , 10., 19 ( 2018):  Pages 99 - 128. Available open access on the Revista Digital de Iconografía Medieval site: https://www.ucm.es/data/cont/media/www/pag-113798/9.%20Casiopea%20(digital).pdf.
Year of Publication: 2018.

11. Record Number: 44421
Author(s): Hopkins, Lisa,
Contributor(s):
Title : Queens and the British History
Source: From the Romans to the Normans on the English Renaissance Stage. Lisa Hopkins .   Medieval Institute Publications, 2017. Revista Digital de Iconografia Medieval , 10., 19 ( 2018):  Pages 99 - 118. The essay is available open access from the Medieval Institute Press: https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1002&context=mip_edam. See Chapter 4.
Year of Publication: 2017.

12. Record Number: 44422
Author(s): Hopkins, Lisa,
Contributor(s):
Title : Athelstan, the Virgin King
Source: From the Romans to the Normans on the English Renaissance Stage. Lisa Hopkins .   Medieval Institute Publications, 2017. Revista Digital de Iconografia Medieval , 10., 19 ( 2018):  Pages 167 - 186. The essay is available open access from the Medieval Institute Press: https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?filename=7&article=1002&context=mip_edam&type=additional
Year of Publication: 2017.

13. Record Number: 28342
Author(s): Giles of Rome, , and Jacopo de Forli,
Contributor(s): Wallis, Faith, translator
Title : The Scholastic “Quaestio”: Aristotle vs. Galen on the Generation of the Embryo [Includes two primary source texts: 1) Giles of Rome, “The Formation of the Fetus in the Uterus,” Chapter 6 That a Woman Can Be Impregnated without the Emission of Her Own Sperm (defending the Aristotelian position) and 2) Jacopo de Forli, “On the Generation of the Embryo,” Question Four Does the Seed of the Woman Contribute Actively to the Generation of the Fetus? (the response from the supporters of Galen).]
Source: Medieval Medicine: A Reader.   Edited by Faith Wallis 15  University of Toronto Press, 2010. Revista Digital de Iconografia Medieval , 10., 19 ( 2018):  Pages 222 - 231.
Year of Publication: 2010.

14. Record Number: 28343
Author(s): de Tournemire, Jean,
Contributor(s): Wallis, Faith, translator
Title : Metaphor and Malignancy: The Difficult Case of Cancer [Includes two primary source texts: Jean of Tournemire diagnoses his daughter’s breast cancer and receives divine medical aid and Guillaume Boucher treats a Parisian lady with breast cancer. Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source: Medieval Medicine: A Reader.   Edited by Faith Wallis Readings in Medieval Civilizations and Cultures, 15.   University of Toronto Press, 2010. Revista Digital de Iconografia Medieval , 10., 19 ( 2018):  Pages 344 - 351.
Year of Publication: 2010.

15. Record Number: 28344
Author(s):
Contributor(s): Ross, James Bruce, translator
Title : The Faculty of Medicine of Paris vs. Jacoba Felicie [Account of a trial in which the Faculty of Medicine of Paris accused a female healer of illicit practice. Includes arguments that Jacoba advanced in her defense. Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source: Medieval Medicine: A Reader.   Edited by Faith Wallis Readings in Medieval Civilizations and Cultures, 15.   University of Toronto Press, 2010. Revista Digital de Iconografia Medieval , 10., 19 ( 2018):  Pages 366 - 369.
Year of Publication: 2010.

16. Record Number: 28345
Author(s):
Contributor(s): Wallis, Faith, translator
Title : Jewish Doctors: The Case of Provence: A Jewish Doctor is Accused of Abortion and Malpractice [Court record of the case against Isaac, a surgeon, accused of giving a Christian woman an abortifacient. Includes Isaac’s defense with testimony from several witnesses. The defendant was found guilty and had to pay a fine of fifty pounds. Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source: Medieval Medicine: A Reader.   Edited by Faith Wallis Readings in Medieval Civilizations and Cultures, 15.   University of Toronto Press, 2010. Revista Digital de Iconografia Medieval , 10., 19 ( 2018):  Pages 381 - 383.
Year of Publication: 2010.

17. Record Number: 28346
Author(s): Constantine the African, ,
Contributor(s): Wallis, Faith, translator
Title : Medicalizing Sex: Constantine the African [Constantine came from North Africa and brought Arabic medical texts with him to Italy. He translated or adapted his book, “On Sexual Intercourse”, from Arabic sources. He discusses issues from a medical point of view and includes many remedies for sexual problems. Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source: Medieval Medicine: A Reader.   Edited by Faith Wallis Readings in Medieval Civilizations and Cultures, 15.   University of Toronto Press, 2010. Revista Digital de Iconografia Medieval , 10., 19 ( 2018):  Pages 511 - 523.
Year of Publication: 2010.

18. Record Number: 29887
Author(s): Kueny, Kathryn
Contributor(s):
Title : The Cure of Perfection: Women's Obstetrics in Early and Medieval Islam
Source: Perspectives on Medieval Art: Learning through Looking.   Edited by Ena Giurescu Heller and Patricia C. Pongracz .   Museum of Biblical Art, 2010. Revista Digital de Iconografia Medieval , 10., 19 ( 2018):  Pages 187 - 197.
Year of Publication: 2010.

19. Record Number: 22484
Author(s): Johnsen, Rosemary Erickson
Contributor(s):
Title : Medieval Women in Context [The author discusses recent historical crime fiction set in the Middle Ages with women as the main characters. Authors Candace Robb and Margaret Frazer are mentioned, but Johnsen gives extended treatment to author Sharan Newman and her 12th century character Catherine LeVendeur. Also discussed are literary themes involving Heloise, pilgrimage, Jews, women's roles, and modern issues which parallel medieval concerns. Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source: Contemporary Feminist Historical Crime Fiction. .   Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. Revista Digital de Iconografia Medieval , 10., 19 ( 2018):  Pages 21 - 58.
Year of Publication: 2006.

20. Record Number: 16302
Author(s): Eichhorn-Mulligan, Amy C.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Anatomy of Power and the Miracle of Kingship: The Female Body of Sovereignty in a Medieval Irish Kingship Tale
Source: Speculum , 81., 4 (October 2006):  Pages 1014 - 1054.
Year of Publication: 2006.

21. Record Number: 12502
Author(s): Green, Monica.
Contributor(s):
Title : Bodies, Gender, Health, Disease: Recent Work on Medieval Women's Medicine [An essay review covering work done in the 1990s and early 21st century on various aspects of text editing, "technologies of the body," sex differences, women as medical agents, the question of whether childbirth is an exclusively female space, and future directions of the field. Title note supplied by author.]
Source: Sexuality and Culture in Medieval and Renaissance Europe.   Edited by Philip M. Soergel Studies in medieval and renaissance history, 3rd ser., 2.   AMS Press, 2005. Speculum , 81., 4 (October 2006):  Pages 1 - 46. Also part of the series: Studies in Medieval and Renaissance History Third Series 2 (Old Series 27, New Series 17) (2005). Sexuality and Culture in Medieval and Renaissance Europe
Year of Publication: 2005.

22. Record Number: 14687
Author(s): Green, Monica H.
Contributor(s):
Title : Flowers, Poisons and Men: Menstruation in Medieval Western Europe [The author analyzes medieval medical traditions in regard to menstruation. Green notes the virtual absence of any mention of the term in other kinds of literature including fabliaux which openly discuss sexuality. She also draws attention to the widespread belief that Jewish men menstruate, a belief rooted in antisemitism. Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source: Menstruation: A Cultural History.   Edited by Andrew Shail and Gillian Howie .   Palgrave Macmillan, 2005. Speculum , 81., 4 (October 2006):  Pages 51 - 64.
Year of Publication: 2005.

23. Record Number: 13628
Author(s): Rider, Catherine.
Contributor(s):
Title : Between Theology and Popular Practice: Medieval Canonists on Magic and Impotence [The author argues that canon lawyers in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries created a set of rules to deal with impotence. Their writings indicate that they knew about lay magical practices. Some canonists urged those who were bewitched to seek magical cures. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Boundaries of the Law: Geography, Gender, and Jurisdiction in Medieval and Early Modern Europe.   Edited by Anthony Musson .   Ashgate, 2005. Speculum , 81., 4 (October 2006):  Pages 53 - 66.
Year of Publication: 2005.

24. Record Number: 28214
Author(s): Newman, Barbara
Contributor(s):
Title : What Did It Mean to Say "I Saw"? The Clash between Theory and Practice in Medieval Visionary Culture [The author analyzes differing approaches to visions within the medieval Church. One view encouraged visions through guided meditation, with Newman citing Christina of Markyate and Mechthild of Hackeborn as examples. The other predominant view rejected visualization and questioned the source of visions. During the later Middle Ages theologians became increasingly concerned about the danger of cultivated visions, especially those of women like Bridget of Sweden and other lay people influenced by the pseudo-Bonaventuran "Meditations on the Life of Christ." Ultimately the more critical approach to visions prevailed among the learned. Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source: Speculum , 80., 1 ( 2005):  Pages 1 - 43.
Year of Publication: 2005.

25. Record Number: 20700
Author(s): Nichols, Stephen G
Contributor(s):
Title : Writing the New Middle Ages [Contemporary medieval studies attempts to escape the traps of regarding the Middle Ages as either entirely "other" or simply "modern." Nichols reviews the contributions of five recent authors: Jody Enders, Suzannah Biernoff, Jeffrey Hamburger, R. Howard Bloch, and Daniel Heller-Roazen. All have made advances by refusing to adhere to the fixed boundaries drawn by previous scholarship. Of particular interest are works by Hamburger, discussing the agency nuns attained even when cloistered, and Bloch, describing the role of Marie de France in creating vernacular literature. Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source: PMLA: Publications of the Modern Language Association of America , 120., 2 ( 2005):  Pages 422 - 441.
Year of Publication: 2005.

26. Record Number: 15314
Author(s): Butler, Sara M.
Contributor(s):
Title : Abortion by Assault: Violence against Pregnant Women in Thirteenth and Fourteenth- Century England
Source: Journal of Women's History , 17., 4 ( 2005):  Pages 9 - 31.
Year of Publication: 2005.

27. Record Number: 14124
Author(s): Legaré, Anne-Marie.
Contributor(s):
Title : La librairye de Madame: Two Princesses and Their Libraries [The author briefly surveys the manuscripts belonging to Margaret of York and Margaret of Austria. Margaret of York acquired a small number of French religious texts in line with her roles as wife and potential mother. In contrast her step-granddaughter c
Source: Women of Distinction: Margaret of York | Margaret of Austria.   Edited by Dagmar Eichberger .   Brepols, 2005. Journal of Women's History , 17., 4 ( 2005):  Pages 206 - 219.
Year of Publication: 2005.

28. Record Number: 19230
Author(s): Moulinier, Laurence
Contributor(s):
Title : Conception et corps féminin selon Hildegarde de Bingen [The author explores Hildegard of Bingen's ideas about women's reproductive systems in her medical treatise, "Causae et curae." Topics treated in the article include female semen, conception, sexuality, reproduction, menstruation, and aging. Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source: Storia delle donne 1 (2005): 139-157.
Year of Publication: 2005.

29. Record Number: 14689
Author(s): Bildhauer, Bettina.
Contributor(s):
Title : The "Secrets of Women" (c. 1300): A Medieval Perspective on Menstruation [The author analyzes a fifteenth century German language translations of the natural philosophical text, the "Secrets of Women." It presents a system in which gender is defined by the body with men as the norm and women as dangerous, impure, and weak. Title note provided by Feminae.].
Source: Menstruation: A Cultural History.   Edited by Andrew Shail and Gillian Howie .   Palgrave Macmillan, 2005.  Pages 65 - 75.
Year of Publication: 2005.

30. Record Number: 11389
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Notes and Announcements [Includes a variety of announcements from the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship. See in particular the notes from editors discussing the "Forum's" editorial move from the University of Oregon to Minot State University. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 37., (Spring 2004):  Pages 3 - 8.
Year of Publication: 2004.

31. Record Number: 11395
Author(s): Green, Monica.
Contributor(s):
Title : Bibliography: Women and Medicine [Includes journal articles, editions of texts and translations, essays, and monographs. Each item has an informative annotation giving evaluative comments as well as a summary of contents. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 37., (Spring 2004):  Pages 35 - 39.
Year of Publication: 2004.

32. Record Number: 11406
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Notes and Announcements [Includes news from the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship and details about the organization's sessions at the 2005 Medieval Congress at Kalamazoo, Michigan. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 38., (Winter 2004):  Pages 5 - 17.
Year of Publication: 2004.

33. Record Number: 14636
Author(s): Yakou, Hisashi.
Contributor(s):
Title : Contemplating Angels and the "Madonna of the Apocalypse" [The author briefly discusses antecedents for the nuns' elevated choir and then turns to the church's frescoes. Yakou in particular focuses on the "Angelic Choirs" and the "Madonna of the Apocalypse" in terms both of iconography and meditative use by the Clarissan nuns. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: The Church of Santa Maria Donna Regina: Art, Iconography, and Patronage in Fourteenth-Century Naples.   Edited by Janis Elliott and Cordelia Warr .   Ashgate, 2004. Speculum , 80., 1 ( 2005):  Pages 93 - 107.
Year of Publication: 2004.

34. Record Number: 14638
Author(s): Hoch, Adrian S.
Contributor(s):
Title : The "Passion Cycle": Images to Contemplate and Imitate amid Clarissan "clausura" [The author argues that the passion cycle in the church of Santa Maria Donna Regina emphasized an "imitatio Mariae," a devotion to the Eucharist, and Franciscan concerns for female viewers. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: The Church of Santa Maria Donna Regina: Art, Iconography, and Patronage in Fourteenth-Century Naples.   Edited by Janis Elliott and Cordelia Warr .   Ashgate, 2004. Speculum , 80., 1 ( 2005):  Pages 129 - 153.
Year of Publication: 2004.

35. Record Number: 22695
Author(s):
Contributor(s): Caballero-Navas, Carmen, ed. and trans
Title : Book of Women's Love, or Book of Regimen of Women
Source: The Book of Women's Love and Jewish Medieval Medical Literature on Women.   Edited by Carmen Caballero-Navas .   Kegan Paul, 2004. Speculum , 80., 1 ( 2005):  Pages 108 - 212.
Year of Publication: 2004.

36. Record Number: 12605
Author(s): Burns, Jane E.
Contributor(s):
Title : Why Textiles Make a Difference [Dress, textiles, and cloth production are emerging as important categories of analysis in medieval studies. While investigating textiles and representations thereof (in literary, historical, legal, and religious texts), medievalists cross disciplinary boundaries in order to examine how the personal and cultural realms interact. Social theorists, feminists, and scholars of material culture can all contribute to our understandings of how goods and objects take upon new meanings for men and women in different social contexts. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Medieval Fabrications: Dress, Textiles, Clothwork, and Other Cultural Imaginings.   Edited by E. Jane Burns .   Palgrave, 2004. Speculum , 80., 1 ( 2005):  Pages 1 - 18.
Year of Publication: 2004.

37. Record Number: 14637
Author(s): Fleck, Cathleen A
Contributor(s):
Title : To exercise yourself in these things by continued contemplation: Visual and Textual Literacy in the Frescoes at Santa Maria Donna Regina [The author argues that the Donna Regina fresco program was planned to enhance the resident nuns' understanding and meditation on the tenets of the faith. Furthermore many of the nuns would have had a visual literacy as well as a textual literacy to understand the sophisticated iconography and the Latin inscriptions. The nuns also would need to summon up relevant Biblical texts and other readings from memory. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: The Church of Santa Maria Donna Regina: Art, Iconography, and Patronage in Fourteenth-Century Naples.   Edited by Janis Elliott and Cordelia Warr .   Ashgate, 2004. Speculum , 80., 1 ( 2005):  Pages 109 - 128.
Year of Publication: 2004.

38. Record Number: 11346
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Notes and Announcements [Includes a variety of announcements from the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship. Note in particular the Society's procedures for book reviews in the "Forum." Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 35., ( 2003):  Pages 3 - 5.
Year of Publication: 2003.

39. Record Number: 11350
Author(s): Green, Monica.
Contributor(s):
Title : Bibliography: Women and Medicine [Includes journal articles, editions of texts and translations, essays, and monographs. Each item has an informative annotation giving evaluative comments as well as a summary of contents. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 35., ( 2003):  Pages 19 - 23.
Year of Publication: 2003.

40. Record Number: 11371
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Notes and Announcements [Includes a variety of announcements from the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship. Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 36., (Fall 2003):  Pages 3 - 8.
Year of Publication: 2003.

41. Record Number: 12879
Author(s): Marchand, Eckart.
Contributor(s):
Title : Monastic "Imitatio Christi": Andrea del Castagno's "Cenacolo di S. Apollonia"
Source: Artibus et Historiae , 47., ( 2003):  Pages 31 - 50.
Year of Publication: 2003.

42. Record Number: 14642
Author(s): Tylus, Jane
Contributor(s):
Title : Charitable Women: Hans Baron's Civic Renaissance Revisited [Hans Baron's idea of the active life focused exclusively on civic politics, leaving little room for the roles of women. A wider view, encompassing social phenomena, leaves room for their participation in Renaissance Florence. Costanza, a figure in Lorenzo Medici's play for the feast of Saints John and Paul, is treated as a figure of the "mixed" life, combining devotion with a willingness to marry for the good of the Roman empire. Florentine women like Lucrezia Tornabuoni, Lorenzo's mother, led such a life of devotion and service. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Rinascimento , 43., ( 2003):  Pages 287 - 307.
Year of Publication: 2003.

43. Record Number: 10996
Author(s): de Vries, Joyce.
Contributor(s):
Title : Caterina Sforza's Portrait Medals: Power, Gender and Representation in the Italian Renaissance Court [Caterina Sforza ruled Forli and Imola after the murder of her husband. She commissioned a series of portrait medals that established her persona first as a noble young wife, then a widow-ruler, and finally as a triumphant regent. The medals use motifs associated with male political power to indicate her authority and success. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Woman's Art Journal , 24., 1 (Spring/Summer 2003):  Pages 23 - 28.
Year of Publication: 2003.

44. Record Number: 11379
Author(s): Dockray-Miller, Mary.
Contributor(s):
Title : Thinking about Careers: The Medievalist-Feminist Divide [The author urges junior colleagues to market their feminism to colleagues. Dockray-Miller argues that in small colleges, feminism has more appeal to tenure committes than does medieval studies. Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 36., (Fall 2003):  Pages 41 - 43.
Year of Publication: 2003.

45. Record Number: 10904
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Blanche of Castile and Facinger's "Medieval Queenship": Reassessing the Argument [The author examines Facinger's argument for the diminution of Capetian queenly power and holds up Blanche of Castile as a counter argument. Shadis points to her authority and power, often in "non-official" venues, as mother and regent, arguing that she shows a solid and consistent exercise of queenship. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Capetian Women.   Edited by Kathleen Nolan .   Palgrave Macmillan, 2003. Medieval Feminist Forum , 36., (Fall 2003):  Pages 137 - 161.
Year of Publication: 2003.

46. Record Number: 12880
Author(s): Michalski, Sergiusz.
Contributor(s):
Title : Venus as Semiramis: A New Interpretation of the Central Figure of Botticelli's "Primavera"
Source: Artibus et Historiae , 48., ( 2003):  Pages 213 - 222.
Year of Publication: 2003.

47. Record Number: 11372
Author(s): O'Rourke, Michael.
Contributor(s):
Title : Becoming (Queer) Medieval: Queer Methodologies in Medieval Studies: Where are We Now? [First in a series of roundtable article entitled "Queer Methodologies and/or Queers in Medieval Studies: Where are We Now?"] [The author signals two important recent developments: 1)Alan Bray's prediction that Derrida and issues of affect would become the dominant concern rather than Foucault's emphasis on the physicality of sex and 2) Carolyn Dinshaw's efforts to bring together the medieval and post-modern by rethinking heteronormative temporalities. Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 36., (Fall 2003):  Pages 9 - 14.
Year of Publication: 2003.

48. Record Number: 11380
Author(s): Hoofnagle, Wendy Marie.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Next Generation: Bringing Medieval Feminism into the New Millennium [The author urges medieval feminists to demystify the discipline in order to attract more women and minorities. Active mentoring will encourage a new diverse generation and promote a lively exchange of ideas. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 36., (Fall 2003):  Pages 44 - 48.
Year of Publication: 2003.

49. Record Number: 11376
Author(s): Salih, Sarah.
Contributor(s):
Title : A response: Queer Medievalism: Why and Whither?
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 36., (Fall 2003):  Pages 31 - 33.
Year of Publication: 2003.

50. Record Number: 11828
Author(s): Rawcliffe, Carole
Contributor(s):
Title : Women, Childbirth, and Religion in Later Medieval England [The author traces the means by which the church offered support and aid to women facing childbirth. Rawcliffe also accounts for varied responses provided by popular religion including saints, shrines, and charms. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Women and Religion in Medieval England.   Edited by Diana Wood .   Oxbow Books, 2003. Medieval Feminist Forum , 36., (Fall 2003):  Pages 91 - 117.
Year of Publication: 2003.

51. Record Number: 11654
Author(s): Hughes, Jonathan.
Contributor(s):
Title : Alchemy and the Exploration of Late Medieval Sexuality [The author explores the natural philosophic principles which, for physicians and alchemists, governed sexuality, conception, and masculinity. Case studies of Henry VI and Edward IV demonstrate ways in which alchemy was used to physic the King. The source of trouble was sometimes identified as a malevolent woman, a witch, or a supernatual threat like the half-serpent Melusine. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Medieval Virginities.   Edited by Anke Bernau, Ruth Evans, and Sarah Salih .   Religion and Culture in the Middle Ages series. University of Wales Press; University of Toronto Press, 2003. Medieval Feminist Forum , 36., (Fall 2003):  Pages 140 - 166.
Year of Publication: 2003.

52. Record Number: 9719
Author(s): Mecham, June L.
Contributor(s):
Title : Reading Between the Lines: Compilation, Variation, and the Recovery of an Authentic Female Voice in the "Dornenkron" Prayer Books from Wienhausen
Source: Journal of Medieval History , 29., 2 (June 2003):  Pages 109 - 128.
Year of Publication: 2003.

53. Record Number: 10908
Author(s): Stanton, Anne Rudloff.
Contributor(s):
Title : Isabelle of France and Her Manuscripts, 1308-58 [The manuscripts range in time across the queen's career. Some appear to have been used as readings for her children, while others were psalters and books of hours for Isabelle's private devotions. Women feature prominently in the illuminations, and political issues, such as Edward's shortcomings as a king, apparently are also a preoccupation. Title note supplied by Feminae. ].
Source: Capetian Women.   Edited by Kathleen Nolan .   Palgrave Macmillan, 2003. Journal of Medieval History , 29., 2 (June 2003):  Pages 225 - 252.
Year of Publication: 2003.

54. Record Number: 9707
Author(s): Powell, Raymond A.
Contributor(s):
Title : Margery Kempe: An Exemplar of Late Medieval English Piety [The author argues that scholars for the most part have not put Margery Kempe within the context of late medieval English religious beliefs and practices. He suggests that Kempe was not religiously abnormal and that the themes in her book reflect contemporary religious concerns. Powell argues that people reacted badly to Kempe because she was annoying. Furthermore, Kempe was writing an account of her life as a saint, and persecution from her peers was part of her suffering. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Catholic Historical Review (Full Text via Project Muse) 89, 1 (January 2003): 1-23. Link Info
Year of Publication: 2003.

55. Record Number: 11650
Author(s): Cartwright, Jane.
Contributor(s):
Title : Virginity and Chastity Tests in Medieval Welsh Prose [The author examines a range of literary texts including the "Fourth Branch of Mabinogi," Welsh law codes, Arthurian tales, and medical texts. In many instances the texts present a false virgin who is revealed through magical or medical texts. She is then often subjected to public humiliation as is the cuckolded husband. Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source: Medieval Virginities.   Edited by Anke Bernau, Ruth Evans, and Sarah Salih .   Religion and Culture in the Middle Ages series. University of Wales Press; University of Toronto Press, 2003.  Pages 56 - 79.
Year of Publication: 2003.

56. Record Number: 10784
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Notes and Announcements [Includes news from the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship, calls for papers and for manuscripts, and a description of the new, Medieval Feminist Forum Subsidia issue, "Women in Medieval Iberia: A Selected Bibliography." Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 33., (Spring 2002):  Pages 3 - 11.
Year of Publication: 2002.

57. Record Number: 10859
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Candidates for Election to Advisory Board [Twelve people present themselves as candidates for the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship Advisory Board. They describe their scholarly interests and their goals for the Society. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 33., (Spring 2002):  Pages 65 - 68.
Year of Publication: 2002.

58. Record Number: 10860
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Notes and Announcements [Includes news from the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship and calls for papers. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 34., (Fall 2002):  Pages 3 - 7.
Year of Publication: 2002.

59. Record Number: 11033
Author(s): Bildhauer, Bettina.
Contributor(s):
Title : Bloodsuckers: The Construction of Female Sexuality in Medieval Science and Fiction [The author briefly examines three texts ("Secrets of Women," Mechthild of Magdeburg's "The Flowing Light of the Godhead," and Der Stricker's "Daniel of the Blossoming Valley"). Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Consuming Narrative: Gender and Monstrous Appetite in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.   Edited by Liz Herbert McAvoy and Teresa Walters .   University of Wales Press, 2002. Medieval Feminist Forum , 34., (Fall 2002):  Pages 104 - 115.
Year of Publication: 2002.

60. Record Number: 6214
Author(s): Green, Monica H.
Contributor(s):
Title : Hard-Core Philology: Notes from the Trenches of the History of Women's Medicine
Source: Seeing Gender: Perspectives on Medieval Gender and Sexuality. Gender and Medieval Studies Conference, King's College, London, January 4-6, 2002. .  2002. Rinascimento , 43., ( 2003):
Year of Publication: 2002.

61. Record Number: 6611
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Weapons to Probe the Womb: The Material Culture of Abortion and Contraception in the Early Byzantine Period [The author examines surviving medical instruments designed for surgical abortions and a variety of literary texts to determine the procedures as well as the social and religious contexts for birth control].
Source: The Material Culture of Sex, Procreation, and Marriage in Premodern Europe.   Edited by Anne L. McClanan and Karen Rosoff Encarnación .   Palgrave, 2002. Rinascimento , 43., ( 2003):  Pages 33 - 57.
Year of Publication: 2002.

62. Record Number: 6223
Author(s): Lindgren, Amy K.,
Contributor(s):
Title : Violent Erections and Suffocating Wombs: Gendered Sexual Dysfunctions in Medieval Spain
Source: Seeing Gender: Perspectives on Medieval Gender and Sexuality. Gender and Medieval Studies Conference, King's College, London, January 4-6, 2002. .  2002. Rinascimento , 43., ( 2003):
Year of Publication: 2002.

63. Record Number: 6401
Author(s): Borgerding, Todd M.
Contributor(s):
Title : Sic ego te dilegebam: Music, Homoeroticism, and the Sacred in Early Modern Europe [The motet "Planxit autem David," sometimes attributed to Josquin Desprez, can be read as expressing, in both text and music, a homosexual relationship between David and Jonathan; this would place the motet in the same context as the homoerotic myth of Ganymede and the depiction of Orpheus by Ovid as turning to the love of young men after his loss of Eurydice; the emphasis upon the name of Jonathan in this composition can be read as supporting such an interpretation; the Appendix presents the Latin text as set by Josquin Desprez along with an English translation].
Source: Gender, Sexuality, and Early Music.   Edited by Todd M. Borgerding .   Routledge, 2002. Rinascimento , 43., ( 2003):  Pages 249 - 263.
Year of Publication: 2002.

64. Record Number: 5374
Author(s): Elsakkers, Marianne.
Contributor(s):
Title : In Pain You Shall Bear Children (Gen. 3:16): Medieval Prayers for a Safe Delivery [The author argues in part that the rhythms of the "Peperit" charm helped a pregnant woman adjust to the different stages of labor; the Appendix reproduces the texts of four versions of the "Peperit" charm].
Source: Women and Miracle Stories: A Multidisciplinary Exploration.   Edited by Anne-Marie Korte Studies in the History of Religions, 88.   Brill, 2001. Social History of Medicine , 14., 1 (April 2001):  Pages 179 - 207.
Year of Publication: 2001.

65. Record Number: 6356
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Advisory Board Ballot [for members to elect candidates to the advisory board of the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship].
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 31., (Spring 2001):  Pages 63 - 64.
Year of Publication: 2001.

66. Record Number: 6745
Author(s): Siberry, Elizabeth.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Crusader's Departure and Return: A Much Later Perspective [The author explores the nineteenth century romantic image of the crusader's departure and return in popular art, poetry, and music].
Source: Gendering the Crusades.   Edited by Susan B. Edgington and Sarah Lambert .   University of Wales Press, 2001. Medieval Feminist Forum , 31., (Spring 2001):  Pages 177 - 190.
Year of Publication: 2001.

67. Record Number: 10181
Author(s): Bartlett, Anne Clark.
Contributor(s):
Title : Message from the President of SMFS [Bartlett reviews the activities that the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship will sponsor at the Medieval Congress at Kalamazoo, Michigan.].
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 32., (Fall 2001):  Pages 3 - 4.
Year of Publication: 2001.

68. Record Number: 10182
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Announcements [Includes a description of the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship's second Subsidia issue ("Women in Medieval Iberia: A Selected Bibliography") and a new Web site as well as calls for papers and a conference report on "Seeing Gender: Perspectives on Medieval Gender and Sexuality," King's College, London, January 4-6, 2002. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 32., (Fall 2001):  Pages 6 - 13.
Year of Publication: 2001.

69. Record Number: 6050
Author(s): Ferrante, Joan M.
Contributor(s):
Title : Licet longinquis regionibus corpore separati: Letters as a Link in and to the Middle Ages [in a presidential address delivered to the Medieval Academy of America, Ferrante describes the goals and contents of the online database "Epistolae" (http://db.ccnmtl.columbia.edu/Ferrante/about2.html) that presents the texts of letters from and to women, 4th through 13th centuries; the author traces a number of themes from the letters including women's involvement in public struggles, support of women by other women, and strong relationships between women and men].
Source: Speculum , 76., 4 (October 2001):  Pages 877 - 895.
Year of Publication: 2001.

70. Record Number: 10187
Author(s): Green, Monica.
Contributor(s):
Title : Bibliography: Women and Medicine [Recent journal articles, books, and essays in collections. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 32., (Fall 2001):  Pages 50 - 53.
Year of Publication: 2001.

71. Record Number: 37143
Author(s):
Contributor(s): Green, Monica H., ed. and trans.
Title : The Trotula: A Medieval Compendium of Women's Medicine
Source: The Trotula: A Medieval Compendium of Women's Medicine.   Edited by Monica H. Green .   University of Pennsylvania Press, 2001. Medieval Feminist Forum , 32., (Fall 2001):  Pages 70 - 191.
Year of Publication: 2001.

72. Record Number: 5791
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Donatello's Bronze "David" and "Judith" as Metaphors of Medici Rule in Florence
Source: Art Bulletin , 83., 1 (March 2001):  Pages 32 - 47.
Year of Publication: 2001.

73. Record Number: 8956
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Women and the Circulation of Books [The author argues that patronage has been regarded as the dominant, if not exclusive, means by which people acquired books at the French court. However, there were other ways that women were more likely to have books including inheritance, wedding presents, and New Year's Day gifts. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Journal of the Early Book Society for the Study of Manuscripts and Printing History , 4., ( 2001):  Pages 9 - 31. Issue Title: Women and Book Culture in Late Medieval and Early Modern France
Year of Publication: 2001.

74. Record Number: 5886
Author(s): Trenchard-Smith, Margaret.
Contributor(s):
Title : Status strictus: Hysteria, Virginity, and the Byzantine Medical Encyclopedists of the Sixth and Seventh Centuries [The author analyzes the writings of Aëtius of Amida and Paulus Aegineta who borrowed from Galen and the second-century Soranus of Ephesus; thereby they rejected the ideas of the wandering womb and the likelihood that virginity would cause hysterical suff
Source: Byzantine Studies Conference. Abstracts of Papers , 27., ( 2001):  Pages 17
Year of Publication: 2001.

75. Record Number: 5718
Author(s): Kent, Dale.
Contributor(s):
Title : Women in Renaissance Florence [the author gives a brief overview of the factors and attendant evidence that characterized the lives of Florentine noble women including marriage and the painted wedding chests (cassone), childbirth and the celebratory birth trays, clothing and sumptuary laws, religious devotion, and death].
Source: Virtue and Beauty: Leonardo's "Ginevra de'Benci" and Renaissance Portraits of Women." Catalog of an exhibition held Sept. 30, 2001-Jan. 6, 2002 at the National Gallery of Art.   Edited by David Alan Brown et al.; with contributions by Elizabeth Cropper and Eleonora Luciano. .   National Gallery of Art in association with Princeton University Press, 2001. Byzantine Studies Conference. Abstracts of Papers , 27., ( 2001):  Pages 24 - 47.
Year of Publication: 2001.

76. Record Number: 6437
Author(s): Dell, Helen.
Contributor(s):
Title : Voices, "Realities," and Narrative Style in the Anonymous "chansons de toile" [The author examines 16 anonymous "chansons de toile" (particularly the nine in the "Chansonnier Français de Saint-Germain-des-Prés") and argues that the male narrating voice allows the female character and her song to be fully realized].
Source: Parergon: Journal of the Australian and New Zealand Association for Medieval and Early Modern Studies, New Series , 18., 2 (January 2001):  Pages 17 - 33.
Year of Publication: 2001.

77. Record Number: 8957
Author(s): Legaré, Anne-Marie.
Contributor(s):
Title : Charlotte de Savoie's Library and Illuminators [The author argues that Queen Charlotte took much interest in her books. She was particularly occupied with devotional literature and with giving needed books to her family members. The Appendix presents excerpts from documents relating to her library and a list of manuscripts belonging to her husband, Louis XI, that were included in the inventory of Charlotte's property. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Journal of the Early Book Society for the Study of Manuscripts and Printing History , 4., ( 2001):  Pages 32 - 67. Issue Title: Women and Book Culture in Late Medieval and Early Modern France
Year of Publication: 2001.

78. Record Number: 6168
Author(s): Demaitre, Luke.
Contributor(s):
Title : Domesticity in Middle Dutch "Secrets of Men and Women"
Source: Social History of Medicine , 14., 1 (April 2001):  Pages 1 - 25.
Year of Publication: 2001.

79. Record Number: 4873
Author(s): Green, Monica H.
Contributor(s):
Title : Women's Medical Practice and Health Care in Medieval Europe [In this essay review, the author surveys work that had been done up through 1988 on different aspects of women's engagements with medicine, both as patients and as practitioners. She argues that the general assumption that "women's health was women's business" is misleading, both because it overestimates the exclusivity of women's practice on other women and because it overlooks abundant evidence that men, too, were involved in women's healthcare. Accompanying this reprint of the original 1989 version are important corrigenda and addenda. Originally published in Signs 14, 2 (1989): 434-473. Repubished in "Sisters and Workers in the Middle Ages." Edited by Judith M. Bennett et al. University of Chicago Press, 1989. Title note supplied by author.].
Source: Women's Healthcare in the Medieval West: Texts and Contexts.   Edited by Monica H. Green Variorum Collected Studies Series, 680.   Ashgate Publishing, 2000. Medieval Feminist Newsletter Subsidia Series , 1., ( 2000):  Pages 39 - 78. Originally published in Signs 14, 2 (1989): 434-473. Repubished in "Sisters and Workers in the Middle Ages." Edited by Judith M. Bennett et al. University of Chicago Press, 1989.
Year of Publication: 2000.

80. Record Number: 4874
Author(s): Green, Monica H.
Contributor(s):
Title : Documenting Medieval Women's Medical Practice [Originally published in "Practical Medicine from Salerno to the Black Death." Edited by Luis Garcia-Ballester, et al. Cambridge University Press, 1994.]
Source: Women's Healthcare in the Medieval West: Texts and Contexts.   Edited by Monica H. Green Variorum Collected Studies Series, 680.   Ashgate Publishing, 2000. Medieval Feminist Newsletter Subsidia Series , 1., ( 2000):  Pages 322 - 352. Originally published in "Practical Medicine from Salerno to the Black Death." Edited by Luis Garcia-Ballester, et al. Cambridge University Press, 1994.
Year of Publication: 2000.

81. Record Number: 4875
Author(s): Green, Monica H.
Contributor(s):
Title : The "De genecia" Attributed to Constantine the African [the author argues that "De Genecia," the women's medical text attributed by Peter the Deacon to Constantine the African, is in fact a text that begins "De Genitalibus membris" and is a translation of a portion of al-Majusi's medical text known in Latin as the "Pantegni;" the gynecological text "De Passionibus mulierum," a collection of diseases and remedies, was attributed to Constantine but in fact shows no evidence connecting it with his circle at Monte Cassino; the Appendix presents an edition of the Latin medical text, "De Genitalibus membris"].
Source: Women's Healthcare in the Medieval West: Texts and Contexts.   Edited by Monica H. Green Variorum Collected Studies Series, 680.   Ashgate Publishing, 2000. Medieval Feminist Newsletter Subsidia Series , 1., ( 2000):  Pages 299 - 323. Originally published in Speculum (Full Text via JSTOR) 62, 2 (April 1987): 299-323. Link Info
Year of Publication: 2000.

82. Record Number: 4876
Author(s): Green, Monica H.
Contributor(s):
Title : Obstetrical and Gynecological Texts in Middle English [The author complies a list of Middle English manuscripts that contain different texts on childbirth, women’s health, sexuality, and cosmetics. Some of the manuscripts also contain medicinal and culinary recipes. Many of the medical complications are attributed to the female healer Trota (or Trotula) of Salerno, but others are attributed to male authors like Galen and Hippocrates. Although the Trotula texts were popular in late medieval England, the manuscripts indicate that the most widely disseminated medical text was “The Sekeness of Wymmen” by Gilbertus Anglicus. The textual and codicological evidence of these manuscripts suggests that both men and women (and both physicians and laypersons) possessed and read these texts. The author describes each manuscript and lists its contents, and the appendix transcribes a new manuscript (the Middle English "Nature of Wommen") that has never been described. Originally published in Studies in the Age of Chaucer 14 (1992): 53-88. Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source: 2000. Medieval Feminist Newsletter Subsidia Series , 1., ( 2000): Originally published in Studies in the Age of Chaucer 14 (1992): 53-88.
Year of Publication: 2000.

83. Record Number: 4877
Author(s): Green, Monica H.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Development of the "Trotula" [the Trotula collection has a complicated history; the earliest texts mix European medical lore with Arabic material derived from Constantine the African and other translators; the collection and its component parts were translated into several vernacular languages, including Hebrew and Irish; appendices include a listing of "Trotula" Latin manuscripts, a list of medieval translations by language, and three collations of "Trotula" texts, the "Liber de sinthomatibus mulierum," the "De curis mulierum," and the "De ornatu mulierum"].
Source: Women's Healthcare in the Medieval West: Texts and Contexts.   Edited by Monica H. Green Variorum Collected Studies Series, 680.   Ashgate Publishing, 2000. Medieval Feminist Newsletter Subsidia Series , 1., ( 2000):  Pages 119 - 203. Originally published in Revue d'histoire des textes 26 (1996).
Year of Publication: 2000.

84. Record Number: 4878
Author(s): Green, Monica H.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Possibilities of Literacy and the Limits of Reading: Women and the Gendering of Medical Literacy
Source: Women's Healthcare in the Medieval West: Texts and Contexts.   Edited by Monica H. Green Variorum Collected Studies Series, 680.   Ashgate Publishing, 2000. Medieval Feminist Newsletter Subsidia Series , 1., ( 2000):  Pages 1 - 76.
Year of Publication: 2000.

85. Record Number: 4879
Author(s): Green, Monica H.
Contributor(s):
Title : Medieval Gynecological Texts: A Handlist [the texts range from the 4th through the 15th centuries and include translations into the vernaculars].
Source: Women's Healthcare in the Medieval West: Texts and Contexts.   Edited by Monica H. Green Variorum Collected Studies Series, 680.   Ashgate Publishing, 2000. Medieval Feminist Newsletter Subsidia Series , 1., ( 2000):  Pages 1 - 36.
Year of Publication: 2000.

86. Record Number: 4965
Author(s): Mullally, Erin.
Contributor(s):
Title : Conference Report: Secrets, Confessions, and Revelations October 16-17, University of Oregon
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 29., (Spring 2000):  Pages 6 - 7.
Year of Publication: 2000.

87. Record Number: 6191
Author(s): Gullino, Giuseppe.
Contributor(s):
Title : Un' Eroina Mai Esistita: Anna Erizzo (1470) [Antonio Erizzo died in 1470 fighting the Turkish advance in the Balkans; a legend arose that he had a daughter, Anna, who committed suicide rather than tolerate the sexual advances of the sultan; the tale was embroidered and found its way into drama and opera].
Source: Archivio Veneto Series V , 190., 131 ( 2000):  Pages 127 - 134.
Year of Publication: 2000.

88. Record Number: 9321
Author(s): Riva, Massimo.
Contributor(s):
Title : Hereos/Eleos. L'Ambivalente terapia del mal d'amore nel libro "Chiamato Decameron cognominato prencipe Galeotto" [Boccaccio's "Decameron" can be understood as a literary remedy for lovesickness. Medieval medicine located this illness in the brain, not the heart, expecting it to manifest itself more often in women whose nature was moist. Men, however, with their drier humors, suffered more once their passions were aroused. Boccaccio found love's remedy in stories relating its potentially harmful delights. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Italian Quarterly , 37., (Winter-Fall 2000):  Pages 69 - 106.
Year of Publication: 2000.

89. Record Number: 4542
Author(s): Barolini, Teodolinda.
Contributor(s):
Title : Dante and Francesca da Rimini: Realpolitik, Romance, Gender [The author explores the minimal historical evidence for Francesca da Polenta, wife of Gianciotto Malatesta and lover of his brother, Paolo; in contrast Dante memorializes Francesca with a striking, psychological portrait].
Source: Speculum , 75., 1 (January 2000):  Pages 1 - 28.
Year of Publication: 2000.

90. Record Number: 5573
Author(s): Green, Monica H.
Contributor(s):
Title : Books as a Source of Medical Education for Women in the Middle Ages
Source: Dynamis: Acta Hispanica ad Medicinae Scientiarumque Historiam Illustrandam , 20., ( 2000):  Pages 331 - 369.
Year of Publication: 2000.

91. Record Number: 5010
Author(s): Buck, R. A.
Contributor(s):
Title : Women and Language in the Anglo-Saxon Leechbooks
Source: Women and Language , 23., 2 (Fall 2000):  Pages 41 - 50.
Year of Publication: 2000.

92. Record Number: 6344
Author(s): Suydam, Mary A.
Contributor(s):
Title : Under the Spell of the Sorceress: The Allure of the Medieval [the author argues that the film "The Sorceress" wrongly depicts two cultures in conflict: the learned, masculine, and dominant versus the folk, feminine, and marginal; "No, I resist this film ["The Sorceress"] because it creates such images of powerful binary cultures in collision that are so in synchrony with modern beliefs and longings about the medieval that as a teacher I find them very difficult to overcome." (Page 51)].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter Subsidia Series , 1., ( 2000):  Pages 46 - 52. (Medieval Women in Film)
Year of Publication: 2000.

93. Record Number: 5574
Author(s): Cabré, Montserrat.
Contributor(s):
Title : From a Master to a Laywoman: A Feminine Manual of Self-Help
Source: Dynamis: Acta Hispanica ad Medicinae Scientiarumque Historiam Illustrandam , 20., ( 2000):  Pages 371 - 393.
Year of Publication: 2000.

94. Record Number: 5394
Author(s): Bryce, Judith.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Fifteenth Century: (ii) Vernacular Poetry and Mystery Plays [The author briefly highlights the work of two authors, Lucrezia Tornabuoni de'Medici and Antonia Pulci, both of whom drew on sacred themes for their subject matter].
Source: A History of Women's Writing in Italy.   Edited by Letizia Panizza and Sharon Wood .   Cambridge University Press, 2000. Dynamis: Acta Hispanica ad Medicinae Scientiarumque Historiam Illustrandam , 20., ( 2000):  Pages 31 - 36.
Year of Publication: 2000.

95. Record Number: 5465
Author(s): Renevey, Denis.
Contributor(s):
Title : Margery's Performing Body: The Translation of Late Medieval Discursive Religious Practices
Source: Writing Religious Women: Female Spiritual and Textual Practices in Late Medieval England.   Edited by Denis Renevey and Christiania Whitehead .   University of Toronto Press, 2000. Dynamis: Acta Hispanica ad Medicinae Scientiarumque Historiam Illustrandam , 20., ( 2000):  Pages 197 - 216.
Year of Publication: 2000.

96. Record Number: 6345
Author(s): Bitel, Lisa M.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Sorceress as an Interpretive Tool in Medieval History Classes [the author argues that films like "The Sorceress" encourage students to critique the interpretation of history as presented in the film and to transfer these critical skills to written texts once they realize that the texts are simply other instances of interpretation].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter Subsidia Series , 1., ( 2000):  Pages 52 - 56. (Medieval Women in Film)
Year of Publication: 2000.

97. Record Number: 4717
Author(s): Bauer, Elizabeth Jensen.
Contributor(s):
Title : Medieval Women and the Care of the Sick: Some Evidence from Hagiography [the author argues that some qualities that women saints display in the care of the sick according to their "vitae" are different from those in men's lives, namely humility, strength (not only physical strength but an absence of revulsion and nausea before the physical conditions of lepers and other sick people), and penance by identifying with the suffering of others].
Source: Magistra , 5., 1 (Summer 1999):  Pages 79 - 96.
Year of Publication: 1999.

98. Record Number: 4827
Author(s): Bestul, Thomas H.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Meditation on Mary Magdalene of Alexander Nequam [The author provides the first edition of Alexander Neckham's "Meditation on Mary Magdalene" written in Latin].
Source: Journal of Medieval Latin , 9., ( 1999):  Pages 1 - 40.
Year of Publication: 1999.

99. Record Number: 5655
Author(s): Zaccaria, Raffaella Maria.
Contributor(s):
Title : Documenti e ipotesi sulla madre di Giulio de' Medici [when Giuliano de' Medici was murdered in the Pazzi Conspiracy, he left an illegitimate son, Giulio, the future Pope Clement VII; we cannot accurately identify his mother, variously mentioned as Fioretta Gorini or Fioretta del Cittadino in our sources; we do know that Lorenzo de' Medici raised this nephew with his own children; Lorenzo's son, Leo X, invented a marriage between Giulio's parents when making his cousin a cardinal].
Source: Interpres: Rivista di Studi Quattrocenteschi , 18., ( 1999):  Pages 234 - 243. Reprinted in Raffaella Maria Zaccaria, Studi sulla trasmissione archivistica: secoli XV-XVI. Conte Editore, 2002. Pages 219-226.
Year of Publication: 1999.

100. Record Number: 4369
Author(s): Thompson, John Jay.
Contributor(s):
Title : Medea in Christine de Pizan's "Mutacion de Fortune," or How to Be a Better Mother [the author argues that Christine becomes a man in spirit in the "Mutacion;" she becomes every man following in the steps of the man Christ in the "Juste Vie;" Christine provides a counter example to Medea who followed the path of "Grant Science" and met with disaster; the appendices reproduce four short textual extracts concerning Medea, two from the "Mutacion de Fortune" and "Histoire ancienne jusqu'à César].
Source: Forum for Modern Language Studies , 35., 2 ( 1999):  Pages 158 - 174.
Year of Publication: 1999.

101. Record Number: 5689
Author(s): Cannon, Joanna
Contributor(s):
Title : The Stoclet "Man of Sorrows": A Thirteenth-century Italian Diptych Reunited [The author argues that the small panel formed a devotional diptych with a painting of the Virgin and Child; the author points out that the two panels engage each other and draw the viewer into the drama].
Source: Burlington Magazine (Full Text via JSTOR) 141, 1151 (February 1999): 107-112. Link Info
Year of Publication: 1999.

102. Record Number: 3549
Author(s): Hollywood, Amy.
Contributor(s):
Title : Inside Out: Beatrice of Nazareth and Her Hagiographer [The author compares a "vita" about Beatrice of Nazareth with her own writing "Seven Manners of Loving God" ; the author finds the texts quite different especially in Beatrice's exploration of the interplay between interiority and exteriority].
Source: Gendered Voices: Medieval Saints and Their Interpreters.   Edited by Catherine M. Mooney .   University of Pennsylvania Press, 1999.  Pages 78 - 98.
Year of Publication: 1999.

103. Record Number: 4316
Author(s): Rasmussen, Ann Marie.
Contributor(s):
Title : Message form the President of SMFS [Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship].
Source: Medieval Feminist Forum , 28., (Fall 1999):  Pages 3 - 4.
Year of Publication: 1999.

104. Record Number: 5572
Author(s): Green, Monica H.
Contributor(s):
Title : In Search of an "Authentic" Women's Medicine: The Strange Fates of Trota of Salerno and Hildegard of Bingen
Source: Dynamis: Acta Hispanica ad Medicinae Scientiarumque Historiam Illustrandam , 19., ( 1999):  Pages 25 - 54.
Year of Publication: 1999.

105. Record Number: 7822
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Seeing Double: Reflections In (and On) the Mirrors of Joan of Arc [The author reflects on her experiences teaching a course on Joan of Arc in the English Department. She and her students read a wide variety of medieval and modern texts. They were particularly struck by the personal, sometimes autobiographical elements, which the author included. Astell concludes by giving examples drawn from the course readings including texts by Jules Michelet, Mark Twain, Christine de Pizan, Lillian Hellman, and Vita Sackville-West. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Teaching: SMART , 7., 2 (Fall 1999):  Pages 5 - 15.
Year of Publication: 1999.

106. Record Number: 5336
Author(s): Brook, Leslie C.
Contributor(s):
Title : Rewards and Punishments in the "De Amore" and Kindred Texts [the author analyzes an allegory in which noble women, and to a lesser extent men, were punished or rewarded according to their service to love; the author argues that the original intention may have been to frighten or cajole women into surrendering themselves to suitors].
Source: Reading Medieval Studies , 25., ( 1999):  Pages 3 - 16.
Year of Publication: 1999.

107. Record Number: 3785
Author(s): Sweet, Victoria.
Contributor(s):
Title : Hildegard of Bingen and the Greening of Medieval Medicine [the author argues that Hildegard drew on four different traditions: Christian, literate, monastic, and domestic medicine; furthermore her emphasis on "viriditas" (the greening power of plants and the human power of conception and healing) springs from an agricultural worldview as does the theory of the four humors].
Source: Bulletin of the History of Medicine (Full Text via Project Muse) 73, 3 (Fall 1999): 381-403. Link Info
Year of Publication: 1999.

108. Record Number: 4187
Author(s): Tuerk, Jacquelyn.
Contributor(s):
Title : An Early Byzantine Inscribed Amulet and Its Narratives
Source: Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies , 23., ( 1999):  Pages 25 - 42.
Year of Publication: 1999.

109. Record Number: 4309
Author(s): Yoshikawa, Naoë Kukita.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Role of the Virgin Mary and the Structure of Meditation in the "Book of Margery Kempe"
Source: The Medieval Mystical Tradition England, Ireland, and Wales. Exeter Symposium VI. Papers read at Charney Manor, July 1999.   Edited by Marion Glasscoe .   D. S. Brewer, 1999. Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies , 23., ( 1999):  Pages 224 - 227.
Year of Publication: 1999.

110. Record Number: 4386
Author(s): Wiethaus, Ulrike.
Contributor(s):
Title : Female Spirituality, Medieval Women, and Commercialism in the United States [the author examines popular, commercialized uses of medieval women and religion including the figure of the witch, calendars and other merchandise, and two popular anthologies of women's spiritual writings, "Beguine Spirituality" edited by Fiona Bowie and "The Hidden Tradition" edited by Lavinia Byrne].
Source: New Trends in Feminine Spirituality: The Holy Women of Liège and Their Impact.   Edited by Juliette Dor, Lesley Johnson, and Jocelyn Wogan-Browne Medieval Women: Texts and Contexts, 2.   Brepols, 1999. Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies , 23., ( 1999):  Pages 297 - 311.
Year of Publication: 1999.

111. Record Number: 3635
Author(s): Rouhi, Leyla.
Contributor(s):
Title : Y Otros Treynta Officios: The Definition of a Medieval Women's Work in "Celestina" [the author argues that Celestina is described by others as having several occupations or as having an occupation too difficult to describe; the author suggests that this condition characterizes women's work in general in which many of them had multi-professional activities].
Source: Celestinesca , 22., 2 (Otoño 1998):  Pages 21 - 31.
Year of Publication: 1998.

112. Record Number: 3398
Author(s): Giladi, Avner.
Contributor(s):
Title : Breast-Feeding in Medieval Islamic Thought: a Preliminary Study of Legal and Medical Writings
Source: Journal of Family History , 23., 2 (April 1998):  Pages 107 - 123.
Year of Publication: 1998.

113. Record Number: 3990
Author(s): Glaze, Florence Eliza.
Contributor(s):
Title : Medical Writer: "Behold the Human Creature"
Source: Voice of the Living Light: Hildegard of Bingen and Her World.   Edited by Barbara Newman .   University of California Press, 1998. Journal of Family History , 23., 2 (April 1998):  Pages 125 - 148.
Year of Publication: 1998.

114. Record Number: 4401
Author(s): Biller, Peter.
Contributor(s):
Title : Confessors' Manuals and the Avoiding of Offspring [The author argues that pastoral concern over efforts to prevent conception indicates an increase in the practice and may be correlated to overpopulation].
Source: Handling Sin: Confession in the Middle Ages.   Edited by Peter Biller and A.J. Minnis York Studies in Medieval Theology .   York Medieval Press, 1998. Journal of Family History , 23., 2 (April 1998):  Pages 165 - 187.
Year of Publication: 1998.

115. Record Number: 4481
Author(s): Green, Monica H.
Contributor(s):
Title : Traittié tout de mençonges: The "Secrés des dames," "Trotula," and Attitudes toward Women's Medicine in Fourteenth- and Early-Fifteenth-Century France
Source: Christine de Pizan and the Categories of Difference.   Edited by Marilynn Desmond .   University of Minnesota Press, 1998. Interpres: Rivista di Studi Quattrocenteschi , 18., ( 1999):  Pages 146 - 178. Later reprinted in Women's Healthcare in the Medieval West: Texts and Contexts. Monica H. Green. Variorum Collected Studies Series, CS680. Ashgate Publishing, 2000, VI:146-178.
Year of Publication: 1998.

116. Record Number: 2975
Author(s): Park, Katharine.
Contributor(s):
Title : Medicine and Magic: The Healing Arts [discusses a range of services from licensed doctors, informal healers, and priests].
Source: Gender and Society in Renaissance Italy.   Edited by Judith C. Brown and Robert C. Davis .   Longman, 1998. Interpres: Rivista di Studi Quattrocenteschi , 18., ( 1999):  Pages 129 - 149.
Year of Publication: 1998.

117. Record Number: 4289
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Hildegard of Bingnen's "Causes and Cures": A Radical Feminist Response to the Doctor-Cook Binary [The author argues that Hildegard sees women's role as cooks expanding to include the balancing of humors and the practice of both medicine and theology; Hildegard tied God's creation to women's bodies and women's work].
Source: Hildegard of Bingen: A book of Essays.   Edited by Maud Burnett McInerney .   Garland Publishing, 1998. Interpres: Rivista di Studi Quattrocenteschi , 18., ( 1999):  Pages 53 - 73.
Year of Publication: 1998.

118. Record Number: 6503
Author(s): Musacchio, Jacqueline Marie.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Medici-Tornabuoni "Desco da Parto" in Context [the author argues that the large and elaborately painted birth tray now in the Metropolitan Museum was given by Piero de Medici to his wife Lucrezia Tornabuoni on the birth of their son, Lorenzo de Medici; the author explores the production and use of birth trays in the celebration of childbirth in post-plague Italy].
Source: Metropolitan Museum Journal , 33., ( 1998):  Pages 137 - 151.
Year of Publication: 1998.

119. Record Number: 8521
Author(s): Higgins, Sydney.
Contributor(s):
Title : Playing the Serpent: Devil, Virgin, or Mythical Beast? [The author briefly traces the development of representations of the serpent in the Garden of Eden in the later Middle Ages. First it was a natural-looking snake, then a winged monster, and finally it had a woman's head and chest on top of a snake's body. Higgins goes on to consider the depiction of the serpent in plays, specifically the Cornish "Ordinalia" (midfourteenth century) and "The Creation of the World" (midsixteenth century). Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: European Medieval Drama , 2., ( 1998):  Pages 207 - 214.
Year of Publication: 1998.

120. Record Number: 2956
Author(s): Kolve, V. A.
Contributor(s):
Title : Ganymede / "Son of Getron": Medieval Monasticism and the Drama of Same-Sex Desire
Source: Speculum , 73., 4 (October 1998):  Pages 1014 - 1067.
Year of Publication: 1998.

121. Record Number: 3095
Author(s): Johnson, Willis.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Myth of Jewish Male Menses
Source: Journal of Medieval History , 24., 3 (September 1998):  Pages 273 - 295.
Year of Publication: 1998.

122. Record Number: 4222
Author(s): Naughton, Joan.
Contributor(s):
Title : Friars and Their Books at Saint-Louis de Poissy, a Dominican Foundation for Nuns [in an appendix the author lists and describes manuscripts that were owned by the friars at Poissy].
Source: Scriptorium , 52., 1 ( 1998):  Pages 83 - 102.
Year of Publication: 1998.

123. Record Number: 2485
Author(s): Metelnick, Karen, Patricia Hollahan and Carol Harding
Contributor(s):
Title : Medfem Bibliography for ninth-Grade Girls
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 23., (Spring 1997):  Pages 15 - 17.
Year of Publication: 1997.

124. Record Number: 1377
Author(s): Nenno, Nancy P.
Contributor(s):
Title : Between Magic and Medicine: Medieval Images of the Woman Healer [the figures of Queen Îsôt and Feimurgan demonstrate worries that women healers provoked: unregulated practices, superstition, use of magic, even dependence on demonic aid].
Source: Women Healers and Physicians: Climbing a Long Hill.   Edited by Lilian R. Furst .   University Press of Kentucky, 1997. Gender and History , 9., 3 (November 1997):  Pages 43 - 63.
Year of Publication: 1997.

125. Record Number: 1595
Author(s): Ehrenschwendtner, Marie-Luise.
Contributor(s):
Title : A Library Collected by and for the Use of Nuns: St. Catherine's Convent, Nuremberg [by the end of the fifteenth century the library had between 500 and 600 books, mostly in German, consisting of spritual literature and texts supporting the reformed Dominican life].
Source: Women and the Book: Assessing the Visual Evidence.   Edited by Lesley Smith and Jane H.M. Taylor .   British Library and University of Toronto Press, 1997. Gender and History , 9., 3 (November 1997):  Pages 123 - 132.
Year of Publication: 1997.

126. Record Number: 2489
Author(s): Workman, Leslie J.
Contributor(s):
Title : Medievalism Today [The author defines medievalism as "the continuing process of creating the Middle Ages"].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 23., (Spring 1997):  Pages 29 - 33.
Year of Publication: 1997.

127. Record Number: 2958
Author(s): Green, Monica H.
Contributor(s):
Title : A Handlist of Latin and Vernacular Manuscripts of the So-Called "Trotula" Texts. Part II: The Vernacular Translations and Latin Re-Writings [describes in detail all twenty-four known medieval vernacular translations or Latin re-writings of the Trotula texts; identifies three translations into Dutch, five into English, seven into French, three into German, one into Hebrew, one into Irish, two into Italian plus one Latin prose rendition and one Latin verse rendition; includes information on editions of these texts where available].
Source: Scriptorium , 51., 1 ( 1997):  Pages 80 - 104.
Year of Publication: 1997.

128. Record Number: 3509
Author(s): Savage, Anne.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Solitary Heroine: Aspects of Meditation and Mysticism in "Ancrene Wisse," the Katherine Group, and the Wooing Group
Source: Mysticism and Spirituality in Medieval England.   Edited by William F. Pollard and Robert Boenig .   D.S. Brewer, 1997. Scriptorium , 51., 1 ( 1997):  Pages 63 - 83.
Year of Publication: 1997.

129. Record Number: 3618
Author(s): Wrightson, Kellinde.
Contributor(s):
Title : Drápa af Maríugrát, the Joys and Sorrows of the Virgin and Christ, and the Dominican Rosary
Source: Saga Book , 24., 5 ( 1997):  Pages 283 - 292.
Year of Publication: 1997.

130. Record Number: 4431
Author(s): Murray, Jacqueline.
Contributor(s):
Title : Men's Bodies, Men's Minds: Seminal Emissions and Sexual Anxiety in the Middle Ages [The author surveys theological and pastoral writings on men's emissions from Augustine through Jean Gerson. In the thirteenth century these practices came to be judged more harshly and were associated with masturbation as sins of lust. At the same time e
Source: Annual Review of Sex Research , 8., ( 1997):  Pages 1 - 26.
Year of Publication: 1997.

131. Record Number: 6391
Author(s): Derla, Luigi.
Contributor(s):
Title : Francesca, una Beatrice incompiuta (INF V 73-143) [Dante's Francesca da Rimini is an example of heroic love; the poet found precedents in Ovid's "Heroides" and Virgil's portrait of Dido; Francesca and Paolo fit the stereotype of courtly lovers, but Dante's opinion of their surrender to passion is negative, because they separated themselves from God; Francesca, the earthly woman, is contrasted with Beatrice, the heavenly one, with Francesca being an incomplete version of the other].
Source: Italian Quarterly , 34., (Summer-Fall 1997):  Pages 5 - 20.
Year of Publication: 1997.

132. Record Number: 6667
Author(s): Kent, Francis W.
Contributor(s):
Title : Sainted Mother, Magnificent Son: Lucrezia Tornabuoni and Lorenzo de' Medici
Source: Italian History and Culture , 3., ( 1997):  Pages 3 - 34.
Year of Publication: 1997.

133. Record Number: 2503
Author(s): Dockray-Miller, Mary.
Contributor(s):
Title : Maternal Reflections on Gender and Medievalism
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 24., (Fall 1997):  Pages 17 - 20.
Year of Publication: 1997.

134. Record Number: 1379
Author(s): Solomon, Michael.
Contributor(s):
Title : Women Healers and the Power to Disease in Late Medieval Spain [Roig tells how women feign disease in order to trick their husbands and recounts stories of women healers who are incompetent and dangerous].
Source: Women Healers and Physicians: Climbing a Long Hill.   Edited by Lilian R. Furst .   University Press of Kentucky, 1997. Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 24., (Fall 1997):  Pages 79 - 92.
Year of Publication: 1997.

135. Record Number: 6325
Author(s): von Hülsen-Esch, Andrea.
Contributor(s):
Title : Frauen an der Universität? Überlegungen anlässlich einer Gegenüberstellung von mittelalterlichen Bildzeugnissen und Texten
Source: Zeitschrift für Historische Forschung , 24., 3 ( 1997):  Pages 315 - 346.
Year of Publication: 1997.

136. Record Number: 2486
Author(s): Schaus, Margaret.
Contributor(s):
Title : Database for Feminist Research
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 23., (Spring 1997):  Pages 17 - 20.
Year of Publication: 1997.

137. Record Number: 2490
Author(s): Verduin, Kathleen.
Contributor(s):
Title : Shared Interests of "SIM" and "MFN" (Vols. 22 and 23)
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 23., (Spring 1997):  Pages 33 - 35.
Year of Publication: 1997.

138. Record Number: 36903
Author(s): Ibn al-Jazzar
Contributor(s):
Title : Ibn al-Jazzar on Sexual Diseases and Their Treatment
Source: Ibn al-Jazzar on Sexual Diseases and Their Treatment: A Critical Edition of Zad al-musafir wa-qut al-hadir. Provisions for the Traveller and Nourishment for the Sedentary Book 6. The Original Arabic Text with an English Translation, Introduction and Commentary. Abu Jafar Ahmad ibn Ibrahim Ibn al-Jazzar.   Edited by Gerrit Bos .   Kegan Paul International, 1997. Italian History and Culture , 3., ( 1997):  Pages 239 - 310.
Year of Publication: 1997.

139. Record Number: 1832
Author(s): Lochrie, Karma.
Contributor(s):
Title : Desiring Foucault [analysis of the contradictions in Foucault's writings concerning sexuality in the Middle Ages].
Source: Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (Full Text via Project Muse) 27, 1 (Winter 1997): 3-16. Link Info
Year of Publication: 1997.

140. Record Number: 2573
Author(s): Varriano, John.
Contributor(s):
Title : Leonardo's Lost "Medusa" and Other Medici Medusas from the "Tazza Farnese" to Caravaggio
Source: Gazette des Beaux-Arts , 130., 1544 (septembre 1997):  Pages 73 - 80.
Year of Publication: 1997.

141. Record Number: 2456
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : God and Gynaecology: "Women's Secrets" in the Dutch "Historiebijbel van 1360"
Source: German Life and Letters , 50., 4 (October 1997):  Pages 390 - 402.
Year of Publication: 1997.

142. Record Number: 2491
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Literature and Life: "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight" [author describes how her research interests in "Sir Gawain" parallel developments in her personal life].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 23., (Spring 1997):  Pages 35 - 37.
Year of Publication: 1997.

143. Record Number: 2325
Author(s): Moulinier, Laurence.
Contributor(s):
Title : Quand le malin fait de l'esprit. Le rire au Moyen Age vu depuis l'hagiographie [discusses cases from the "vitae" of Hildegard and Saint Bernard in which demons make a mockery of the saints' attempts to exorcism them; the author also explores the negative aspects of laughter in the writings of Bernard and Hildegard].
Source: Annales : Histoire, Sciences Sociales , 52., 3 (mai-juin 1997):  Pages 457 - 475.
Year of Publication: 1997.

144. Record Number: 1380
Author(s): Parker, Holt N.
Contributor(s):
Title : Women Doctors in Greece, Rome, and the Byzantine Empire [most of the essay deals with late antiquity, but the sources section cites seven Byzantine texts mentioning women doctors by name].
Source: Women Healers and Physicians: Climbing a Long Hill.   Edited by Lilian R. Furst .   University Press of Kentucky, 1997. Annales : Histoire, Sciences Sociales , 52., 3 (mai-juin 1997):  Pages 131 - 150.
Year of Publication: 1997.

145. Record Number: 1378
Author(s): Zago, Esther.
Contributor(s):
Title : Women, Medicine, and the Law in Boccaccio's "Decameron" [differences in the therapy available to women and men who are victims of lovesickness].
Source: Women Healers and Physicians: Climbing a Long Hill.   Edited by Lilian R. Furst .   University Press of Kentucky, 1997. Annales : Histoire, Sciences Sociales , 52., 3 (mai-juin 1997):  Pages 64 - 78.
Year of Publication: 1997.

146. Record Number: 6292
Author(s): Kinzelbach, Annemarie.
Contributor(s):
Title : wahnsinnige Weyber betriegen den unverstendigen Poeffel: Anerkennung und Diffamierung heilundiger Frauen und Männer, 1450 bis 1700
Source: Medizinhistorisches Journal , 32., ( 1997):  Pages 29 - 56.
Year of Publication: 1997.

147. Record Number: 2121
Author(s): King, Helen.
Contributor(s):
Title : Reading the Female Body [book reviews][review of three recent titles, one concerning the Middle Ages and the other two Classical Greece].
Source: Gender and History , 9., 3 (November 1997):  Pages 620 - 624.
Year of Publication: 1997.

148. Record Number: 1376
Author(s): Stoudt, Debra L.
Contributor(s):
Title : Medieval German Women and the Power of Healing [both lay and religious women acted as healers using such traditional methods as diet, herbs, and the intervention of God and the saints].
Source: Women Healers and Physicians: Climbing a Long Hill.   Edited by Lilian R. Furst .   University Press of Kentucky, 1997. Gender and History , 9., 3 (November 1997):  Pages 13 - 42.
Year of Publication: 1997.

149. Record Number: 2487
Author(s): Driver, Martha W. and Deborah McGrady
Contributor(s):
Title : Teaching About Women with Multimedia [descriptions of a multimedia study program, a website, and student-created web projects for classes in medieval women's history and in medieval women and literature].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 23., (Spring 1997):  Pages 21 - 23.
Year of Publication: 1997.

150. Record Number: 3290
Author(s): Beutin, Wolfgang
Contributor(s):
Title : Säkularisierungs- und Spiritualisierungstendenzen in der Dichtung und im mystischen Schrifttum des späten Mittelalters. Mit einem Exkurs: Dantes "Matelda" und deutsche Frauenmystik
Source: Jahrbuch der Oswald von Wolkenstein Gesellschaft , 9., ( 1996- 1997):  Pages 361 - 372.
Year of Publication: 1996- 1997.

151. Record Number: 972
Author(s): Sheingorn, Pamela.
Contributor(s):
Title : A Report from the President: Kalamazoo 1996 [description of the society business meeting].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 21., (Spring 1996):  Pages 1
Year of Publication: 1996.

152. Record Number: 973
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Kalamazoo 1997: Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship [description of four sessions sponsored by the Society].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 21., (Spring 1996):  Pages 1 - 2.
Year of Publication: 1996.

153. Record Number: 984
Author(s): Green, Monica.
Contributor(s):
Title : New Bibliography on "Women and Medicine"
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 21., (Spring 1996):  Pages 39 - 41.
Year of Publication: 1996.

154. Record Number: 1155
Author(s): Hasenohr, Geneviève.
Contributor(s):
Title : Du bon usage de la galette des rois [a meditation describes in detail the traditional holiday game in which the person who finds the bean hidden in the twelfth night cake is named king; the text appears in a manuscript copied by a Benedictine nun; the article includes an edition of the text
Source: Romania , 40241 ( 1996):  Pages 445 - 467.
Year of Publication: 1996.

155. Record Number: 1348
Author(s): Everest, Carol A.
Contributor(s):
Title : Sex and Old Age in Chaucer's "Reeve's Prologue" [metaphors for old age and loss of sexual vigor examined in the context of medieval medical theory].
Source: Chaucer Review , 31., 2 ( 1996):  Pages 99 - 114.
Year of Publication: 1996.

156. Record Number: 1815
Author(s): Rütten, Thomas.
Contributor(s):
Title : Receptions of the Hippocratic "Oath" in the Renaissance: The Prohibition of Abortion as a Case Study in Reception
Source: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences , 51., 4 (October 1996):  Pages 456 - 483.
Year of Publication: 1996.

157. Record Number: 1012
Author(s): Krueger, Bonnie and Beth Robertson
Contributor(s):
Title : A Brief History of MFN and SMFS [the Medieval Feminist Newsletter and the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 22., (Fall 1996):  Pages 3 - 6.
Year of Publication: 1996.

158. Record Number: 2957
Author(s): Green, Monica H.
Contributor(s):
Title : A Handlist of the Latin and Vernacular Manuscripts of the So-Called "Trotula" Texts [provides detailed descriptions of 122 extant Latin manuscripts of the Trotula texts].
Source: Scriptorium , 50., 1 ( 1996):  Pages 137 - 175.
Year of Publication: 1996.

159. Record Number: 8
Author(s): Burns, E. Jane, Sarah Kay, Roberta L. Krueger and Helen Solterer
Contributor(s):
Title : Feminism and the Discipline of Old French Studies: "Une Bele Disjointure"
Source: Medievalism and the Modernist Temper.   Edited by R. Howard Bloch and Stephen G. Nichols .   Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996. Jahrbuch der Oswald von Wolkenstein Gesellschaft , 9., ( 1996- 1997):  Pages 225 - 266.
Year of Publication: 1996.

160. Record Number: 1020
Author(s): Lochrie, Karma, Clare A. Lees and Gillian R. Overing
Contributor(s):
Title : Feminism Within and Without the Academy [conflicts within medieval feminism and suggestions for action].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 22., (Fall 1996):  Pages 27 - 31.
Year of Publication: 1996.

161. Record Number: 1018
Author(s): Margolis, Nadia.
Contributor(s):
Title : Joan of Arc: Maneuverable Medievalism, Flexible Feminism [contemorary and later views of Joan of Arc, especially as a political symbol].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 22., (Fall 1996):  Pages 21 - 25.
Year of Publication: 1996.

162. Record Number: 2770
Author(s): Schäfer, Daniel.
Contributor(s):
Title : Embryulkie zwishen Mythos, Recht und Medizin: Zur Überlieferungsgeschichte von Sectio in mortua und Embryotomie in Spätantike und Mittelalter
Source: Medizinhistorisches Journal , 31., 40241 ( 1996):  Pages 275 - 297.
Year of Publication: 1996.

163. Record Number: 2352
Author(s): Rulon-Miller, Nina.
Contributor(s):
Title : A Woman Screams: A Feminist's Introduction to Old English [suggests ways in which to make Anglo-Saxon studies more welcoming to female students].
Source: Old English Newsletter , 29., 3 (Spring 1996):
Year of Publication: 1996.

164. Record Number: 1013
Author(s): Rasmussen, Ann Marie.
Contributor(s):
Title : Message from the Editor [on the issue topic, "Gender and Medievalism" and the relationship between scholarly and popular writing about the Middle Ages].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 22., (Fall 1996):  Pages 6 - 8.
Year of Publication: 1996.

165. Record Number: 4626
Author(s): Mirabella, M. Bella.
Contributor(s):
Title : Women's Secrets: Health and Sexuality of Women in Unpublished Medieval Texts
Source: Sex, Love and Marriage in Medieval Literature and Reality: Thematische Beiträge im Rahmen des 31th [sic] International Congress on Medieval Studies an der Western Michigan University (Kalamazoo-USA) 8.-12. Mai 1996.   Edited by Danielle Buschinger and Wolfgang Spiewok WODAN Bd. 69. Serie 3 Tagungsbände und Sammelschriften Actes de Colloques et Ouvrages Collectifs, 40.   Reineke-Verlag, 1996. Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 22., (Fall 1996):  Pages 33 - 40.
Year of Publication: 1996.

166. Record Number: 3578
Author(s): MacLehose, William F.
Contributor(s):
Title : Nurturing Danger: High Medieval Medicine and the Problem(s) of the Child
Source: Medieval Mothering.   Edited by John Carmi Parsons and Bonnie Wheeler .   Garland Publishing, 1996. Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 22., (Fall 1996):  Pages 3 - 24.
Year of Publication: 1996.

167. Record Number: 1416
Author(s): Cadden, Joan.
Contributor(s):
Title : Western Medicine and Natural Philosophy [discusses the variety of primary sources in medicine and natural philosophy for the study of sexuality and gives an overview of current scholarship in the field].
Source: Handbook of Medieval Sexuality.   Edited by Vern L. Bullough and James A. Brundage .   Garland Reference Library of the Humanities vol. 1696. Garland Publishing, 1996. Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 22., (Fall 1996):  Pages 51 - 80.
Year of Publication: 1996.

168. Record Number: 1019
Author(s): Drout, Michael D. C.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Influence of J. R. R. Tolkien's Masculinist Medievalism
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 22., (Fall 1996):  Pages 26 - 27.
Year of Publication: 1996.

169. Record Number: 3039
Author(s): Clin, Marie-Véronique.
Contributor(s):
Title : Joan of Arc and Her Doctors
Source: Fresh Verdicts on Joan of Arc.   Edited by Bonnie Wheeler and Charles T. Wood .   Garland Publishing, 1996. Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 22., (Fall 1996):  Pages 295 - 302.
Year of Publication: 1996.

170. Record Number: 1424
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Contraception and Early Abortion in the Middle Ages
Source: Handbook of Medieval Sexuality.   Edited by Vern L. Bullough and James A. Brundage .   Garland Reference Library of the Humanities vol. 1696. Garland Publishing, 1996. Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 22., (Fall 1996):  Pages 261 - 277.
Year of Publication: 1996.

171. Record Number: 1584
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Don't Ask, Don't Tell: The Wife of Bath and Vernacular Translations [the Wife of Bath's "Prologue" amd "Tale" promote the status of the vernacular and acknowledge the role female audiences play in the translations of "authoritative" texts like Trotula].
Source: Exemplaria: A Journal of Theory in Medieval and Renaissance Studies , 8., 1 (Spring 1996):  Pages 97 - 123.
Year of Publication: 1996.

172. Record Number: 1092
Author(s): Santos Paz, José Carlos.
Contributor(s):
Title : Nouvelles données sur la tradition du "Liber subtilitatum" d' Hildegarde de Bingen [comparison of the Florence manuscript with the two medical texts by Hildegard reveals portions from the "Physica" and "Causae et Curae" but also sections, while similar in content, that do not appear in either one of the texts].
Source: Journal of Medieval Latin , 6., ( 1996):  Pages 197 - 208.
Year of Publication: 1996.

173. Record Number: 818
Author(s): Legaré, Anne- Marie.
Contributor(s):
Title : Reassessing Women's Libraries in Late Medieval France: The Case of Jeanne de Laval
Source: Renaissance studies : journal of the Society for Renaissance Studies , 10., 2 (June 1996):  Pages 209 - 236.
Year of Publication: 1996.

174. Record Number: 2991
Author(s): Stoertz, Fiona Harris.
Contributor(s):
Title : Suffering and Survival in Medieval English Childbirth [argues that people cared for women suffering in childbirth and that the mother's life was more highly valued than that of the baby].
Source: Medieval Family Roles: A Book of Essays.   Edited by Cathy Jorgensen Itnyre .   Garland Publishing, 1996. Renaissance studies : journal of the Society for Renaissance Studies , 10., 2 (June 1996):  Pages 101 - 120.
Year of Publication: 1996.

175. Record Number: 514
Author(s): Hult, David F.
Contributor(s):
Title : Gaston Paris and the Invention of Courtly Love ["Personal, professional and ideological conflicts" in the discourse of Gaston Paris].
Source: Medievalism and the Modernist Temper.   Edited by R. Howard Bloch and Stephen G. Nichols .   Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996. Renaissance studies : journal of the Society for Renaissance Studies , 10., 2 (June 1996):  Pages 192 - 224.
Year of Publication: 1996.

176. Record Number: 1417
Author(s): Salisbury, Joyce E.
Contributor(s):
Title : Gendered Sexuality [male and female biology and sexuality as represented in religious and medical texts].
Source: Handbook of Medieval Sexuality.   Edited by Vern L. Bullough and James A. Brundage .   Garland Reference Library of the Humanities vol. 1696. Garland Publishing, 1996. Renaissance studies : journal of the Society for Renaissance Studies , 10., 2 (June 1996):  Pages 81 - 102.
Year of Publication: 1996.

177. Record Number: 4
Author(s): Dixon, Laurinda S.
Contributor(s):
Title : Curse of Chastity: The Marginalization of Women in Medieval Art and Medicine [medical condition known as the wandering womb].
Source: Matrons and Marginal Women in Medieval Society.   Edited by Robert R. Edwards and Vickie Ziegler .   Boydell Press, 1995. Medievalia et Humanistica New Series , 22., ( 1995):  Pages 49 - 74.
Year of Publication: 1995.

178. Record Number: 230
Author(s): Long, Jane C.
Contributor(s):
Title : Salvation Through Meditation: The Tomb Frescoes in the Holy Confessors Chapel at Santa Croce in Florence [one prominently portrays a female donor]
Source: Gesta (Full Text via JSTOR) 34, 1 (1995): 77-88. Link Info
Year of Publication: 1995.

179. Record Number: 552
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Upcoming Conference: Studying the Middle Ages and the Renaissance: What Difference Does Gender Make? [list of session topics and speakers].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 19., (Spring 1995):  Pages 12
Year of Publication: 1995.

180. Record Number: 1616
Author(s): Pigg, Daniel F.
Contributor(s):
Title : Medieval Theories of Textual Formation and the Book of Margery Kempe [argues that both Margery and the second scribe consciously shaped the text in response to the commentary tradition].
Source: Studia Mystica New Series , 16., 1 ( 1995):  Pages 106 - 115.
Year of Publication: 1995.

181. Record Number: 1739
Author(s): Hoffman, Donald L.
Contributor(s):
Title : Radix amoris: The "Tavola Ritonda" and Its Response to Dante's Paolo and Francesca
Source: Tristan and Isolde: A Casebook.   Edited by Joan Tasker Grimbert .   Garland Publishing, 1995. Studia Mystica New Series , 16., 1 ( 1995):  Pages 207 - 222.
Year of Publication: 1995.

182. Record Number: 5559
Author(s): Mangieri, Cono A.
Contributor(s):
Title : Gentucca Dantesca e Dintorni [Gentucca, a figure in the "Purgatorio," represents Epicurean philosophy, as Ulysses and Cato represent stoicism; Dante can be described as having committed, at least in his youth, the "Epicurean" sins of gluttony, prodigality, and lust. Gentucca may have
Source: Italian Quarterly , 32., (Summer-Fall 1995):  Pages 5 - 25.
Year of Publication: 1995.

183. Record Number: 6780
Author(s): Coulson, Carolyn.
Contributor(s):
Title : Mysticism, Meditation, and Identification in "The Book of Margery Kempe"
Source: Essays in Medieval Studies , 12., ( 1995):  Pages 1 - 4. and 1 (notes) [in the electronic version available through Project Muse]. Issue title: Children and the Family in the Middle Ages.
Year of Publication: 1995.

184. Record Number: 590
Author(s): Weston, L. M. C.
Contributor(s):
Title : Women's Medicine, Women's Magic: The Old English Metrical Childbirth Charms
Source: Modern Philology (Full Text via JSTOR) 92, 3 (February 1995): 279-293. Link Info
Year of Publication: 1995.

185. Record Number: 566
Author(s): Green, Monica.
Contributor(s):
Title : New Bibliography on Women and Medical Practice
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 19., (Spring 1995):  Pages 39 - 42.
Year of Publication: 1995.

186. Record Number: 560
Author(s): Stuard, Susan Mosher.
Contributor(s):
Title : The American Medievalist: A Social and Professional Profile Revisited [comments on David Herlihy's 1984 article].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 19., (Spring 1995):  Pages 25 - 26.
Year of Publication: 1995.

187. Record Number: 676
Author(s): Jacobs, Nicolas.
Contributor(s):
Title : Une allusion impudique chez Hue de Rotelande: "Se li seaus li pent as nages"
Source: Neuphilologische Mitteilungen , 96., ( 1995):  Pages 223 - 224.
Year of Publication: 1995.

188. Record Number: 553
Author(s): Lochrie, Karma.
Contributor(s):
Title : We' re Here...Get Used To It [importance of medieval feminism's engagement with other feminisms].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 19., (Spring 1995):  Pages 13 - 14.
Year of Publication: 1995.

189. Record Number: 26
Author(s): Lochrie, Karma.
Contributor(s):
Title : Don't Ask, Don't Tell: Murderous Plots and Medieval Secrets [De Secretis Mulierum and women's sexuality].
Source: GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies , 1., 4 ( 1995):  Pages 405 - 417.
Year of Publication: 1995.

190. Record Number: 24
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : What the Nuns Read: Literary Evidence from the English Bridgettine House, Syon Abbey
Source: Mediaeval Studies , 57., ( 1995):  Pages 205 - 222.
Year of Publication: 1995.

191. Record Number: 368
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Francesca da Rimini and Dante's Women Readers
Source: Women, the Book and the Worldly: Selected Proceedings of the St. Hilda's Conference, 1993. Volume 2. [Volume 1: Women, the Book, and the Godly].   Edited by Lesley Smith and Jane H. M. Taylor .   D.S.Brewer, 1995. Mediaeval Studies , 57., ( 1995):  Pages 71 - 83.
Year of Publication: 1995.

192. Record Number: 1691
Author(s): Hicks, Eric.
Contributor(s):
Title : Situation du débat sur le "Roman de la Rose"
Source: Une femme de Lettres au Moyen Age: Études autour de Christine de Pizan.   Edited by Liliane Dulac and Bernard Ribémont .   Paradigme, 1995. Mediaeval Studies , 57., ( 1995):  Pages 51 - 67.
Year of Publication: 1995.

193. Record Number: 487
Author(s): Hollis, Stephanie.
Contributor(s):
Title : Anglo- Saxon Women: Medieval Knowledge and Miracles of Healing [Thirtieth International Congress on Medieval Studies, the Medieval Institute, Western Michigan University, May 4-7, 1995. Thirtieth Symposium on the Sources of Anglo- Saxon Culture, co- sponsered by the Institute and CEMERS, Binghamton University. Session 134].
Source: Old English Newsletter , 28., 3 (Spring 1995):
Year of Publication: 1995.

194. Record Number: 554
Author(s): Dominguez, Lisa.
Contributor(s):
Title : A Mexican- American Feminist Medievalist
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 19., (Spring 1995):  Pages 15
Year of Publication: 1995.

195. Record Number: 557
Author(s): Ingham, Patricia C.
Contributor(s):
Title : Past Watchful Dragons: Thoughts on the Med- Fem Job Market
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 19., (Spring 1995):  Pages 19 - 21.
Year of Publication: 1995.

196. Record Number: 1683
Author(s): McKitterick, Rosamond.
Contributor(s):
Title : Ottonian Intellectual Culture in the Tenth Century and the Role of Theophano
Source: The Empress Theophano: Byzantium and the West at the Turn of the First Millennium.   Edited by Adelbert Davids .   Cambridge University Press, 1995. Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 19., (Spring 1995):  Pages 169 - 193.
Year of Publication: 1995.

197. Record Number: 456
Author(s): Rawcliffe, Carole
Contributor(s):
Title : Women and Medicine: Conflicting Attitudes [contemporary views of the female healer].
Source: Medicine and Society in Later Medieval England. Carole Rawcliffe .   Alan Sutton Publishing, 1995. Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 19., (Spring 1995):  Pages 170 - 193.
Year of Publication: 1995.

198. Record Number: 457
Author(s): Rawcliffe, Carole
Contributor(s):
Title : Women and Medicine: The Midwife and the Nurse
Source: Medicine and Society in Later Medieval England. Carole Rawcliffe .   Alan Sutton Publishing, 1995. Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 19., (Spring 1995):  Pages 194 - 215.
Year of Publication: 1995.

199. Record Number: 558
Author(s): McLaughlin, Megan.
Contributor(s):
Title : On Feminism and Medievalism: Musings from a Prone Position [what is the political impact of research in medieval feminist studies?]
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 19., (Spring 1995):  Pages 21 - 23.
Year of Publication: 1995.

200. Record Number: 357
Author(s): Hayes, Stephen E.
Contributor(s):
Title : Of Three Workings in Man's Soul: A Middle English Prose Meditation on the Annunciation
Source: Vox Mystica: Essays on Medieval Mysticism in Honor of Professor Valerie M Lagorio.   Edited by Anne Clark Bartlett, Thomas H. Bestul, Janet Goebel, and William F. Pollard .   D.S. Brewer, 1995. Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 19., (Spring 1995):  Pages 177 - 199.
Year of Publication: 1995.

201. Record Number: 551
Author(s): Watt, Diane.
Contributor(s):
Title : Conference Report: Gender and Medieval Studies [report on the 1995 annual conference of the Gender and Medieval Studies Group].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 19., (Spring 1995):  Pages 11
Year of Publication: 1995.

202. Record Number: 1607
Author(s): Adamson, Melitta Weiss.
Contributor(s):
Title : Der deutsche Anhang zu Hildegard von Bingens "Liber simplicis medicinae" in Codex 6952 der Bibliothèque nationale in Paris (fol. 232v-238v) [includes an edition of the German text on pages 178, 180-191].
Source: Sudhoffs Archiv , 79., 2 ( 1995):  Pages 173 - 191.
Year of Publication: 1995.

203. Record Number: 1705
Author(s): Picherit, Jean- Louis G.
Contributor(s):
Title : Les références pathologiques et thérapeutiques dans l'oeuvre de Christine de Pizan [discusses metaphors in Christine's works including sickness as a symbol for love, the King as a physician who heals the body politic, and war as a contagious disease].
Source: Une femme de Lettres au Moyen Age: Études autour de Christine de Pizan.   Edited by Liliane Dulac and Bernard Ribémont .   Paradigme, 1995. Sudhoffs Archiv , 79., 2 ( 1995):  Pages 233 - 244.
Year of Publication: 1995.

204. Record Number: 245
Author(s): Kennedy, Thomas C.
Contributor(s):
Title : Translator's Voice in the Second Nun's "Invocacio": Gender, Influence, and Textuality
Source: Medievalia et Humanistica New Series , 22., ( 1995):  Pages 95 - 110. Special issue: Diversity
Year of Publication: 1995.

205. Record Number: 1355
Author(s): Shatzmiller, Joseph.
Contributor(s):
Title : Women in the Medical Profession [Jewish women who were licensed by the authorities to practice medicine].
Source: Jews, Medicine, and Medieval Society. Joseph Shatzmiller .   University of California Press, 1994. Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 18., (Fall 1994):  Pages 108 - 112.
Year of Publication: 1994.

206. Record Number: 3341
Author(s): Minkowski, William L.
Contributor(s):
Title : Physician Motives in Banning Medieval Traditional Healers [The author examines proceedings of the trial of Jacoba Felicie for evidence to support the University of Paris' claims that its laws regarding medical licensure were intended to promote public health].
Source: Women & Health , 21., 1 ( 1994):  Pages 83 - 96.
Year of Publication: 1994.

207. Record Number: 4959
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Report from Kalamazoo: Sessions for 1995 [four session for the 1995 International Medieval Congress have been proposed; brief descriptions and proposers' names are included].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 17., (Summer 1994):  Pages 3
Year of Publication: 1994.

208. Record Number: 4962
Author(s): Summit, Jennifer.
Contributor(s):
Title : Report on Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship Graduate Student Network
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 18., (Fall 1994):  Pages 5 - 6.
Year of Publication: 1994.

209. Record Number: 935
Author(s): Calabrese, Michael.
Contributor(s):
Title : Citations from Antiquity in Renaissance Medical Treatises on Love [physicians viewed erotic love as a pathological state akin to melancholy].
Source: Parergon: Bulletin of the Australian and New Zealand Association for Medieval and Renaissance Studies. New Series , 12., 1 (July 1994):  Pages 1 - 13.
Year of Publication: 1994.

210. Record Number: 1411
Author(s): Koubena, Elizabeth.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Lover's Cure in Ovid's "Remedia Amoris" and Chaucer's "Miller's Tale" [it requires that the lover experience the foulness of the naked female body].
Source: English Language Notes , 32., 1 (September 1994):  Pages 13 - 18.
Year of Publication: 1994.

211. Record Number: 1635
Author(s): Bartlett, Anne Clark.
Contributor(s):
Title : Foucault's "Medievalism" [Foucault's theories of the development of the self and of sexuality as he applied them to the Middle Ages].
Source: Mystics Quarterly , 20., 1 (March 1994):  Pages 10 - 18.
Year of Publication: 1994.

212. Record Number: 4920
Author(s): Poor, Sara S.
Contributor(s):
Title : How do you do? or "How to be a Feminist Medievalist on the Job Market Today"
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 18., (Fall 1994):  Pages 6 - 9.
Year of Publication: 1994.

213. Record Number: 1385
Author(s): Gourevitch, Danielle.
Contributor(s):
Title : Correction d'une correction [satiriasis in "Etymologiae" 4.8.9 does not refer to a painful condition of male sexual arousal but to a skin disease].
Source: Traditio , 49., ( 1994):  Pages 317 - 319.
Year of Publication: 1994.

214. Record Number: 4925
Author(s): Gilbert, Holly Hager.
Contributor(s):
Title : Why Did We Have to Write About Girls? [The author reflects briefly on the challenges of teaching as a feminist historian].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 18., (Fall 1994):  Pages 22 - 25.
Year of Publication: 1994.

215. Record Number: 1881
Author(s): Nathan, Bassem.
Contributor(s):
Title : Medieval Arabic Medical Views on Male Homosexuality [includes a translation of Avicenna's chapter on passive male homosexuality ("ûbnah") from his "Canon of Medicine"].
Source: Journal of Homosexuality , 26., 4 ( 1994):  Pages 37 - 39.
Year of Publication: 1994.

216. Record Number: 5432
Author(s): Klueting, Edeltraud.
Contributor(s):
Title : Les Pouvoirs des abbesses dans les couvents de femmes de la congrégation de Bursfeld [the reformers from Bursfeld decided that Benedictine abbots and abbesses needed to have their powers restricted].
Source: Les Religieuses dans le Cloître et dans le Monde des Origines à Nos Jours. Actes du Deuxième Colloque International de C.E.R.C.O.R. Poitiers, 29 septembre-2 octobre 1988. .   Publications de l'Université de Sainte-Etienne, 1994. Journal of Homosexuality , 26., 4 ( 1994):  Pages 219 - 238.
Year of Publication: 1994.

217. Record Number: 6259
Author(s): Martelli, Mario.
Contributor(s):
Title : Lucrezia Tornabuoni [Lucrezia was married young into the Medici family when it was just consolidating its power; she wrote poetry in Italian, mostly on sacred themes; Lucrezia took part in the political and cultural developments of the Medici regime as a wife, mother, mother-in-law, and poet].
Source: Les Femmes écrivains en Italie au moyen âge et à la renaissance. Actes du colloque international Aix-en-Provence, 12, 13, 14 novembre 1992. .   Université de Provence, 1994. Journal of Homosexuality , 26., 4 ( 1994):  Pages 51 - 86.
Year of Publication: 1994.

218. Record Number: 1333
Author(s): Richard, Adeline.
Contributor(s):
Title : Hagiographie antique et démonologie: Notes sur quelques Passions grecques (BHG 962z, 964 et 1165-66) [the "Passiones" of Juliana of Nicomedia, Juliana and Paul, and Marina of Antioch].
Source: Analecta Bollandiana , 112., 40241 ( 1994):  Pages 255 - 303.
Year of Publication: 1994.

219. Record Number: 4960
Author(s): Voaden, Rosalynn.
Contributor(s):
Title : Conference Report [report on the 1994 annual conference of the Gender and Medieval Studies Group].
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 17., (Summer 1994):  Pages 5
Year of Publication: 1994.

220. Record Number: 4921
Author(s): Lacy, Norris J.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Medievalist and Feminist Theory: Prejudices and Problems
Source: Medieval Feminist Newsletter , 18., (Fall 1994):  Pages 9 - 11.
Year of Publication: 1994.

221. Record Number: 8469
Author(s): Daaleman, Timothy P.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Medical World of Hildegard of Bingen [The author presents a brief overview of early medieval medical history and of Hildegard's two medical texts, "Causae et curae" and "Physica." Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: American Benedictine Review , 44., 3 (September 1993):  Pages 280 - 289.
Year of Publication: 1993.

222. Record Number: 10370
Author(s): Stecopoulos, Eleni and Karl D. Uitti
Contributor(s):
Title : Christine de Pizan’s “Le Livre de la Cite des Dames”: The Reconstruction of Myth [The author examines Christine’s response to a misogynist literary tradition through her treatment of myth and history. Christine derives mythological material from Boccaccio and largely recasts female mythological figures (like goddesses) as historical figures, in contrast to the more common trend of mythologizing history (treating historical figures as mythological). Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Reinterpreting Christine de Pizan.   Edited by Earl Jeffrey Richards, Joan Williamson, Nadia Margolis, and Christine Reno .   University of Georgia Press, 1992. American Benedictine Review , 44., 3 (September 1993):  Pages 48 - 62.
Year of Publication: 1992.

223. Record Number: 6270
Author(s): Francalanci, Andrea.
Contributor(s):
Title : Le tre grazie della "Primavera" del Botticelli: La danza fra allegoria e realtà storica [Botticelli organized the figures in the "Primavera" using the configurations of a dance; court dance was just being developed in this period with geometric circles, with their philosophical implication of perfection, and hierarchic lines as possible configurations; the meaning assigned to the figures in the painting vary, but a courtier of the period could imagine the interactions of various symbolic figures in a meaningful dance].
Source: Medioevo e Rinascimento , ( 1992):  Pages 23 - 37.
Year of Publication: 1992.

224. Record Number: 6609
Author(s): Baldelli, Ignazio.
Contributor(s):
Title : Realtà personale e corporale di Beatrice [Beatrice appears in "La Vita Nuova" as a mute figure; in the "Comedia" she becomes a speaker, conversing with Dante; in the "Paradiso," Dante's juvenile love of Beatrice is reconciled with her theological image into a fraternal relationship].
Source: Giornale Storico della Letteratura Italiana , 169., ( 1992):  Pages 161 - 182.
Year of Publication: 1992.

225. Record Number: 8631
Author(s): Moody, D. Branch.
Contributor(s):
Title : Healing Power in the Marian Miracle Books of Bavarian Healing Shrines, 1489-1523 A.D [The author looks at the representations of healing in several early printed books of miracles, all based on a group of events at Bavarian shrines dedicated to the Virgin. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences , 47., 1 (January 1992):  Pages 68 - 90.
Year of Publication: 1992.

226. Record Number: 9126
Author(s): Meale, Carol M.
Contributor(s):
Title : Legends of Good Women in the European Middle Ages [The author addresses the texts about exemplary women written by Boccaccio, Christine de Pizan, and Chaucer. She takes the character of Medea as an example of their differing approaches, arguing that Chaucer is interested in women in terms of their literary development while Christine has a political dimension to her text. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Archiv für das Studium der neueren Sprachen und Literaturen , 229., 144 ( 1992):  Pages 55 - 70.
Year of Publication: 1992.

227. Record Number: 10004
Author(s): Minnis, Alastair J.
Contributor(s):
Title : Authors in Love: The Exegesis of Late-Medieval Love-Poets [Vernacular poets who wrote about secular love sometimes appropriated techniques of literary criticism from a long scholastic tradition, which involved the interpretation of the Bible or Latin authors like Ovid. By appropriating exegetical (interpretive) practices like learned prologues and glosses within their own manuscripts, vernacular authors gained an authority that was previously reserved only for Latin writers. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: The Uses of manuscripts in literary studies: essays in memory of Judson Boyce Allen.   Edited by Charlotte Cook Morse, Penelope Reed Doob, and Marjorie Curry Woods Studies in medieval culture .   Medieval Institute Publications, Western Michigan University, 1992. Archiv für das Studium der neueren Sprachen und Literaturen , 229., 144 ( 1992):  Pages 161 - 189.
Year of Publication: 1992.

228. Record Number: 10286
Author(s): Biow, Douglas.
Contributor(s):
Title : Pier Della Vigna, Dido, and the Discourse of Virgilian Tragedy in the "Commedia" [The author argues that the Pier della Vigna episode in Dante's Inferno evokes the tragedy of Dido. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Stanford Italian Review , 11., 40180 ( 1992):  Pages 155 - 170.
Year of Publication: 1992.

229. Record Number: 10969
Author(s): Troncarelli, Fabio.
Contributor(s):
Title : Immoderatus amor: Abelardo, Eloisa e Andrea Cappellano [The letters of Abelard and Heloise, in their final form, share ideas and vocabulary with the "De amore" of Andreas Capellanus. In part they draw on common sources, including Ovid, Aristotle, Augustine, and Jerome in an eclectic mix. The idea that lovers
Source: Quaderni Medievali , 34., ( 1992):  Pages 6 - 58.
Year of Publication: 1992.

230. Record Number: 14681
Author(s): Blockmans, Wim.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Devotion of a Lonely Duchess [The author briefly surveys the life of Margaret of York, concentrating on her involvement in politics, art patronage, charity in particular toward children, support of the church, and commissioning of manuscripts. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Margaret of York, Simon Marmion, and "The Visions of Tondal": Papers Delivered at a Symposium organized by the Department of Manuscripts of the J. Paul Getty Museum in Collaboration with the Huntington Library and Art Collections, June 21-24, 1990.   Edited by Thomas Kren .   J. Paul Getty Museum, 1992. Quaderni Medievali , 34., ( 1992):  Pages 29 - 46.
Year of Publication: 1992.

231. Record Number: 14683
Author(s): Cockshaw, Pierre.
Contributor(s):
Title : Some Remarks on the Character and Content of the Library of Margaret of York [The author briefly characterizes the twenty-four books known to have been in Margaret of York's Library. They were mostly religious or moral in nature. Cockshaw describes them as simple and rather uninspired. Title note suppled by Feminae.].
Source: Margaret of York, Simon Marmion, and "The Visions of Tondal": Papers Delivered at a Symposium organized by the Department of Manuscripts of the J. Paul Getty Museum in Collaboration with the Huntington Library and Art Collections, June 21-24, 1990.   Edited by Thomas Kren .   J. Paul Getty Museum, 1992. Quaderni Medievali , 34., ( 1992):  Pages 57 - 62.
Year of Publication: 1992.

232. Record Number: 14684
Author(s): Morgan, Nigel.
Contributor(s):
Title : Texts of Devotion and Religious Instruction Associated with Margaret of York [The author surveys the religious texts known to have belonged to Margaret of York. Morgan categorizes them as books of religious instruction, texts dealing with the soul and the body, and a related group about prayer and contemplation. Morgan suggests that Margaret may have been very devout and read widely in her comprehensive library. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Margaret of York, Simon Marmion, and "The Visions of Tondal": Papers Delivered at a Symposium organized by the Department of Manuscripts of the J. Paul Getty Museum in Collaboration with the Huntington Library and Art Collections, June 21-24, 1990.   Edited by Thomas Kren .   J. Paul Getty Museum, 1992. Quaderni Medievali , 34., ( 1992):  Pages 63 - 76.
Year of Publication: 1992.

233. Record Number: 14775
Author(s): Barstow, Kurtis A.
Contributor(s):
Title : Appendix: The Library of Margaret of York and Some Related Books [This appendix lists and describes thirty manuscripts and early printed books owned by Margaret of York, given by her as gifts, and books related to her but neither commissioned by her nor owned by her. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Margaret of York, Simon Marmion, and "The Visions of Tondal": Papers Delivered at a Symposium organized by the Department of Manuscripts of the J. Paul Getty Museum in Collaboration with the Huntington Library and Art Collections, June 21-24, 1990.   Edited by Thomas Kren .   J. Paul Getty Museum, 1992. Quaderni Medievali , 34., ( 1992):  Pages 257 - 261.
Year of Publication: 1992.

234. Record Number: 7418
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : The Vernal Paradox: Dante's Matelda [The author identifies the "donna soletta" of Dante's "Purgatorio" with Matelda (from the same book), and examines their relationship to Proserpina, the goddess of spring. Matelda has most often been identified with Matilda, Countess of Tuscany and ally of Pope Gregory VII. However, the author argues that the more important consideration is the figure's associations with spring, the Church Militant, and natural justice. Since she is not named until later by Beatrice, her identity may not be extremely significant. However, the author believes she most likely represents Saint Mathilde, empress and wife of Heinrich I, Holy Roman emperor. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Dante Studies , 110., ( 1992):  Pages 107 - 120.
Year of Publication: 1992.

235. Record Number: 8429
Author(s): Ferguson, Margaret.
Contributor(s):
Title : Re-Viewing the Renaissance [The author writes a review essay concerning three books, one of which is "Not of Woman Born: Representations of Caesarean Birth in Medieval and Renaissance Culture" by Renate Blumenfeld- Kosinski. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature (Full Text via JSTOR) 11, 2 (Autumn 1992): 337-347. Link Info
Year of Publication: 1992.

236. Record Number: 7243
Author(s): Bitel, Lisa M.
Contributor(s):
Title : Conceived in Sins, Born in Delights: Stories of Procreation from Early Ireland [The author argues that the surviving narratives of sex, conception, pregnancy, and childbirth from eight and ninth-century Ireland represent an exclusively male ideology, and reveal masculine attempts to co-opt the procreative process more generally. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Journal of the History of Sexuality , 3., 2 ( 1992):  Pages 181 - 202.
Year of Publication: 1992.

237. Record Number: 8704
Author(s): Benedictow, Ole Jørgen.
Contributor(s):
Title : On the Origin and Spread of the Notion that Breast-feeding Women Should Abstain from Sexual Intercourse [The author argues that the idea that sexual relations and a new pregnancy were injurious to a mother’s milk came from such ancient medical authorities as Galen and Soranus. Clerics like Ivo of Chartres picked up the idea and advised caution. However, it never had the status of a taboo. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Scandinavian Journal of History , 17., 1 ( 1992):  Pages 65 - 76.
Year of Publication: 1992.

238. Record Number: 10519
Author(s): Thomasset, Claude.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Nature of Woman [The author provides an overview of medieval representations of women and sexuality through medical treatises (texts concerning female anatomy and physiology) and related writings by theologians and physicians. Galen’s theory that the female internal organs were the inverse of the male sexual organ was very influential, but writers developed diverse and contradictory opinions on the nature of female sex organs, the function of menstrual blood, and the process of determining the gender of a fetus during pregnancy. Writers also expressed anxiety about the ways women shared sexual knowledge with each other, how women derived pleasures from sex, and what caused various illnesses in women. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: A History of Women in the West. Volume 2: Silences of the Middle Ages.   Edited by Christiane Klapisch-Zuber .   Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1992. Scandinavian Journal of History , 17., 1 ( 1992):  Pages 43 - 69.
Year of Publication: 1992.

239. Record Number: 10378
Author(s): Mombello, Gianni
Contributor(s): Margolis, Nadia, trans. and ed.
Title : Christine de Pizan and the House of Savoy [The author traces the relationship between Christine’s family and the royal House of Savoy, particularly the ties between Christine’s father Thomas and members of the Savoy court. The article lists the manuscripts of Christine’s works recorded in Savoy household accounts during the fifteenth century. Although most of the manuscripts in the Savoy collection were destroyed in later centuries, some remain. The article ends with a bibliography of the current manuscript holdings of Christine’s works in the Savoy; the contents and codicological details of each manuscript are described. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Reinterpreting Christine de Pizan.   Edited by Earl Jeffrey Richards, Joan Williamson, Nadia Margolis, and Christine Reno .   University of Georgia Press, 1992. American Benedictine Review , 44., 3 (September 1993):  Pages 187 - 204.
Year of Publication: 1992.

240. Record Number: 8869
Author(s): Weiss-Amer, Melitta.
Contributor(s):
Title : Dietetics of Pregnancy: A Fifteenth Century Perspective [The author examines a text by Heinrich von Laufenberg, a German cleric, who took the European learned tradition of medicine and adapted it to the purposes of the Church. Heinrich emphasized the importance of both mother and child but maintained that the pregnant woman needed male advice. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Fifteenth Century Studies , 19., ( 1992):  Pages 301 - 318.
Year of Publication: 1992.

241. Record Number: 11066
Author(s): Brownlee, Kevin.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Image of History in Christine de Pizan’s "Livre de la Mutacion de Fortune" [Christine creates a double representation of history in this poem. In addition to relating all the great events in human history, she also presents a personal history in the form of an allegorical autobiography. This narrative fictionalizes her own development into the author of the book, as Christine presents her past self reading a sequence of wall paintings. As she narrates these images, Christine establishes her unique authority as a female poet of history, differentiating herself from the male wall-reading protagonists of the Aeneid, Roman de le Rose, the Prose Lancelot, and Dante’s Divine Comedy. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Yale French Studies (Full Text via JSTOR) (1991): 44-56. Special Editions: Style and Values in Medieval Art and Literature.Link Info
Year of Publication: 1991.

242. Record Number: 11783
Author(s): Rolleston, J.D.
Contributor(s):
Title : Penis Captivus: a Historical Note [The author discusses medieval examples of penis captivus, a condition in which the penis becomes incarcerated in the vagina; a postscript on the condition of vaginism is included. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Sex in the Middle Ages: A Book of Essays.   Edited by Joyce E. Salisbury .   Garland Publishing, 1991.  Pages 232 - 237.
Year of Publication: 1991.

243. Record Number: 10653
Author(s): Green, Monica H.
Contributor(s):
Title : Sex and the Medieval Physician [The author writes a review essay of Danielle Jaquart's and Claude Thomasset's "Sexuality and Medicine in the Middle Ages" (Princeton University Press, 1988). Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source: History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences , 13., 2 ( 1991):  Pages 287 - 293.
Year of Publication: 1991.

244. Record Number: 11065
Author(s): Huttar, Charles A.
Contributor(s):
Title : Arms and the Man: The Place of Beatrice in Charles Williams’ Romantic Theology [Williams adopts Dantean themes in his twentieth-century novels and Arthurian poetry. In many of his works, female characters inspire epiphanies just as Beatrice inspired Dante (in “Paradiso” and “Vita Nuova”). Williams’ numerous allusions to the arms (or bodies) of beautiful women invoke famous near-divine feminine figures from medieval literature like Isolde and Beatrice. In both the medieval and modern texts, the woman’s physical beauty is the vehicle for the male lover’s transcendent awareness and understanding of God. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Studies in Medievalism , 3., 3 (Winter 1991):  Pages 307 - 343.
Year of Publication: 1991.

245. Record Number: 11083
Author(s): Baldwin, John W.
Contributor(s):
Title : Five Discourses on Desire: Sexuality and Gender in Northern France Around 1200 [The author examines works by five different authors in order to determine the various ways in which sexual desire (homosexual as well as heterosexual) and gender were understood in thirteenth-century France. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Speculum , 66., 4 ( 1991):  Pages 797 - 819.
Year of Publication: 1991.

246. Record Number: 11038
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Oral Contraceptives and Early-Term Abortifacients during Classical Antiquity and the Middle Ages [The author argues that pre-modern traditional medicine used chemical birth control methods in order to successfully control the birth-rate. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Past and Present (Full Text via JSTOR) 132 (August 1991): 3-32. Link Info
Year of Publication: 1991.

247. Record Number: 11817
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : Cantigas d'escarnho and "serranillas": The Allegory of Careless Love [Sexually explicit texts that parodied literary works of courtly poets (like Bernart de Ventadorn) or obscene poems that satirized medical texts could serve legitimate purposes. Obscene literature participated in an interpretive network alongside other types of texts. Whether directly or indirectly (through allegory, allusion, or double entendre), these texts commented upon or critiqued the themes of more prestigious genres like courtly literature. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Bulletin of Hispanic Studies , 68., 2 (April 1991):  Pages 247 - 263.
Year of Publication: 1991.

248. Record Number: 11776
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title : A Fifteenth-Century Physician's Attitude Toward Sexuality: Dr. Johann Hartlieb's Secreta Mulierum Translation [The author discusses the range of approaches to women’s medicine taken in Hartlieb’s translation of the Secreta mulierum. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Sex in the Middle Ages: A Book of Essays.   Edited by Joyce E. Salisbury .   Garland Publishing, 1991. Bulletin of Hispanic Studies , 68., 2 (April 1991):  Pages 110 - 125.
Year of Publication: 1991.

249. Record Number: 11047
Author(s): Pequigney, Joseph.
Contributor(s):
Title : Sodomy in Dante's "Inferno" and "Purgatorio" [The author analyzes the "Inferno" and "Purgatorio" to show that Dante's treatment of homosexuality was remarkably tolerant for its time, and that it may even have allowed a salvific function for homoerotic love. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Representations (Full Text via JSTOR) 36 (Autumn 1991): 22-42. Link Info
Year of Publication: 1991.

250. Record Number: 10604
Author(s): Greilsammer, Myriam.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Midwife, the Priest, and the Physician: The Subjugation of Midwives in the Low Countries at the End of the Middle Ages [The author traces the varied factors that contributed to the reduction of both status and scope of activity for midwives. Greilsammer argues that the church and civic authorities cooperated to limit midwives while promoting physicians in their place. The appendices include Flemish texts documenting the practices of midwives in city ordinances and oaths of office. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies , 21., 2 (Fall 1991):  Pages 285 - 329.
Year of Publication: 1991.

251. Record Number: 6549
Author(s): Ferguson, Margaret.
Contributor(s):
Title : Re-viewing the Renaissance [The author writes about three books in her review essay including Renate Blumenfeld-Kosinski's "Not of Woman Born: Representations of Caesarean Birth in Medieval and Renaissance Culture"].
Source: Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature (Full Text via JSTOR) 10, 2 (Autumn 1991): 337-347. Link Info
Year of Publication: 1991.

252. Record Number: 11774
Author(s): Lastique, Esther and Helen Rodnite Lemay
Contributor(s):
Title : A Medieval Physician's Guide to Virginity [The essay includes the translation of a chapter which explains how to treat recently deflowered women, from De passionibus mulierum, a medieval Florentine physician’s guide. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Sex in the Middle Ages: A Book of Essays.   Edited by Joyce E. Salisbury .   Garland Publishing, 1991. Quaderni Medievali , 34., ( 1992):  Pages 56 - 79.
Year of Publication: 1991.

253. Record Number: 11795
Author(s): Wimsatt, James I.
Contributor(s):
Title : Reason, Machaut, and the Franklin [The article argues that Machaut’s Remede de Fortune influences the view of marriage and friendship expressed in Chaucer’s Franklin’s Tale. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: The Olde Daunce: Love, Friendship, Sex, and Marriage in the Medieval World.   Edited by Robert R. Edwards and Stephen Spector .   State University of New York Press, 1991.  Pages 201 - 210.
Year of Publication: 1991.

254. Record Number: 10697
Author(s): Murray, Jacqueline.
Contributor(s):
Title : Sexuality and Spirituality: The Intersection of Medieval Theology and Medicine [The author considers the intersections between the discourses of medicine and theology (and particularly those of confession and penance), through which we can investigate medieval notions of sexuality. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Fides et Historia , 23., 1 (Winter/Spring 1991):  Pages 20 - 36.
Year of Publication: 1991.

255. Record Number: 13262
Author(s): Crum, Roger J. and David G. Wilkins
Contributor(s):
Title : In the Defense of Florentine Republicanism: Saint Anne and Florentine Art, 1343-1575 [After Walter of Brienne was expelled from Florence on her feast, Saint Anne became a patron saint of Florence. Her feast was a public holiday, and a chapel was built in her honor. Anne's cult was especially popular whenever the Florentine commune was threatened, including by the Medici. When the Medici triumphed, they coopted the saint to watch over their family's rule. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Interpreting Cultural Symbols: Saint Anne in Late Medieval Society.   Edited by Kathleen Ashley and Pamela Sheingorn .   The University of Georgia Press, 1990.  Pages 131 - 168.
Year of Publication: 1990.

256. Record Number: 12856
Author(s): Harley, David.
Contributor(s):
Title : Historians as Demonologists: The Myth of the Midwife-Witch [The author argues against the belief that midwives were frequently persecuted as witches throughout the medieval and early-modern periods. Article includes a summary. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Social History of Medicine , 3., 1 (April 1990):  Pages 1 - 26.
Year of Publication: 1990.

257. Record Number: 12671
Author(s): Jacquart, Danielle.
Contributor(s):
Title : Medical Explanations of Sexual Behavior in the Middle Ages [The author explores a variety of topics about which physicians wrote including sexual anatomy, the process of generation, and the sex act. In particular Jacquart notes instances in which modesty prevents authors from repeating material from earlier sources concerning such subjects as homosexuality and positions for heterosexual intercourse. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Homo Carnalis: The Carnal Aspect of Medieval Human Life.   Edited by Helen Rodite Lemay Acta .   Center for Medieval and Early Renaissance Studies, State University of New York at Binghamton, 1990.  Pages 1 - 21. Papers presented at a conference held at the State University of New York at Stony Brook in 1987
Year of Publication: 1990.

258. Record Number: 13260
Author(s): Gibson, Gail McMurray
Contributor(s):
Title : Saint Anne and the Religion of Childbed: Some East Anglian Texts and Talismans [The feast of Saint Anne existed in England before it received official recognition in 1382. East Anglian devotion to Anne focused on family ties and childbirth. Osbern Bokenham's poems about Anne were written for Katherine Denston, who desired vainly the birth of a son. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Interpreting Cultural Symbols: Saint Anne in Late Medieval Society.   Edited by Kathleen Ashley and Pamela Sheingorn .   The University of Georgia Press, 1990.  Pages 95 - 110.
Year of Publication: 1990.

259. Record Number: 12859
Author(s): Green, Monica H.
Contributor(s):
Title : Female Sexuality in the Medieval West [The author argues that sexuality may have meant something fundamentally different to women than to men in the Middle Ages, and suggests that we question whether our methodologies are adequate for the task of constructing a history of how sexuality was experienced by medieval women, rather than a history of how female sexuality was viewed by men. Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source: Trends in History , 4., 4 ( 1990):  Pages 127 - 158.
Year of Publication: 1990.

260. Record Number: 15603
Author(s): Lemay, Helen.
Contributor(s):
Title : Women and the Literature of Obstetrics and Gynecology [The author argues that the practices of learned physicians should not be held in opposition to those of midwives. Some folklore was adapted into the humoral system of medicine. In other cases doctors accepted superstitious cures particularly in childbirth and fertility where problems needed decisive remedies. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Medieval Women and the Sources of Medieval History.   Edited by Joel T. Rosenthal .   University of Georgia Press, 1990. Trends in History , 4., 4 ( 1990):  Pages 189 - 209.
Year of Publication: 1990.

261. Record Number: 12868
Author(s): Millett, Bella.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Textual Transmission of "Seinte Iuliene" [The author discusses the transmission of the Middle English alliterative Seinte Iuliene. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Medium Ævum , 59., 1 ( 1990):  Pages 41 - 54.
Year of Publication: 1990.

262. Record Number: 12864
Author(s): Dane, Joseph A.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Prioress and Her Romanzen [The author demonstrates that the standard critical view of the Prioress as a romance heroine was invented by twentieth-century Chaucerians. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Chaucer Review , 24., 3 ( 1990):  Pages 219 - 222.
Year of Publication: 1990.

263. Record Number: 11196
Author(s): Ahern, John.
Contributor(s):
Title : Nudi Grammantes: The Grammar and Rhetoric of Deviation in Inferno XV [Male genitalia have a complex range of metaphorical meanings. Certain writers in the medieval rhetorical tradition align sexuality and rhetoric, comparing forms unorthodox sexuality (like sodomy) with perversions of language. Most notably, Brunetto Latini, a grammarian and sodomite who appears in the Inferno, uses a series of puns involving the word “fico” (fig or tree), confusing the word’s natural (biological) and grammatical gender. In Latin and Italian, this word (meaning both tree and fruit) could metaphorically stand for either the male or the female sexual organs. Brunetto’s learned yet ambiguous use of language thus suggests his own sexual deviancy. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Romanic Review , 81., 4 ( 1990):  Pages 466 - 486.
Year of Publication: 1990.

264. Record Number: 12746
Author(s): Bergman, Robert P.
Contributor(s):
Title : The Earliest Eleousa: A Coptic Ivory in the Walters Gallery [The author sets the date of the ivory Virgin and Child between the late sixth and early seventh century, and the iconography of the sculpture (which resembles other ivories carved in a similar style) confirms its attribution to an early Christian Egyptian workshop. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source: Journal of the Walters Art Gallery , 48., ( 1990):  Pages 37 - 56.
Year of Publication: 1990.

265. Record Number: 28722
Author(s):
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Title : Head of a Woman
Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/55/Domenico_Ghirlandaio_-_Elderly_Woman_-_WGA08918.jpg/250px-Domenico_Ghirlandaio_-_Elderly_Woman_-_WGA08918.jpg
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266. Record Number: 28754
Author(s):
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Title : Simonetta Vespucci as Cleopatra
Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/55/Piero_di_Cosimo_043.jpg/250px-Piero_di_Cosimo_043.jpg
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267. Record Number: 28761
Author(s):
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Title : Simonetta Vespucci as Mythological Nymph
Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/55/Sandro_Botticelli_-_weiBliches_Brustbild.png/250px-Sandro_Botticelli_-_weiBliches_Brustbild.png
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268. Record Number: 28815
Author(s):
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Title : Birth of St. John the Baptist
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269. Record Number: 28830
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Title : Lucrezia Tornabuoni
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270. Record Number: 28841
Author(s):
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Title : Pallas and the Centaur
Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Palas_y_el_Centauro.jpg/250px-Palas_y_el_Centauro.jpg
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271. Record Number: 30909
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Title : Primavera (Spring)
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272. Record Number:
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Title : Baking Brown Bread
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273. Record Number:
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Title : Dill
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274. Record Number:
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Title : Warm Water
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275. Record Number:
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Title : Autumn
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276. Record Number:
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Title : Beets
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277. Record Number:
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Title : Cabbage
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278. Record Number:
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Title : Coitus
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279. Record Number:
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Title : Casaba melons
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280. Record Number:
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Title : Squash
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281. Record Number:
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Title : Summer
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282. Record Number:
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Title : Winter
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283. Record Number:
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Title : Lettuce
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284. Record Number:
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Title : Millet
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285. Record Number:
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Title : Turnips
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286. Record Number:
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Title : Olive Oil
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287. Record Number:
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Title : Partridges
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288. Record Number:
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Title : Pine Cones
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289. Record Number:
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Title : Savich or Barley Soup
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290. Record Number:
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Title : Savich or Wheat Soup
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291. Record Number:
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Title : Roses
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292. Record Number:
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Title : Roses
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293. Record Number:
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Title : Asparagus
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294. Record Number:
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Title : Spelt
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295. Record Number:
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Title : Spinach
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296. Record Number:
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Title : Pasta
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297. Record Number:
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Title : Linen Clothing
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298. Record Number:
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Title : Theriac
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299. Record Number:
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Title : Vinegar
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300. Record Number:
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Title : Vomiting
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301. Record Number:
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Title : Dancing
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302. Record Number: 31271
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Title : The effects of an aphrodisiac as illustrated in a Herbal
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303. Record Number: 31390
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Title : Diagram of a pregnant woman, with fetus and diseases
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304. Record Number: 31391
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Title : A possible portrait of "Trotula"
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305. Record Number: 31427
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Title : Four fetal positions in utero
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306. Record Number: 31461
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Title : Madonna and Child on a Curved Throne
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307. Record Number: 32269
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Title : Beavers
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308. Record Number: 32298
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Title : Icon of the Madonna and Child from Santa Maria Nova
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309. Record Number: 37464
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Title : The woman with the blood flow
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310. Record Number: 40749
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Title : Lady of Shalott
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311. Record Number: 41170
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Title : God Speed
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312. Record Number: 42572
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Title : Cestello Annunciation (Image #1) and Ecce Ancilla Domini (Image #2)
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313. Record Number: 43165
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Title : Doctor treating a plague victim
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314. Record Number: 43166
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Title : Andromeda
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315. Record Number: 43340
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Title : Joan of Arc
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316. Record Number: 43649
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Title : Woman carrying water from a well
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317. Record Number: 45019
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Title : Two women discuss gynecological problems
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318. Record Number: 45020
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Title : The sick in their beds
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319. Record Number: 45125
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Title : A woman feeding a leper in bed
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320. Record Number: 45126
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Title : Frontispiece for the Rule of Saint Augustine and Constitutions of the Hospital of Notre Dame at Seclin
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