Feminae: Medieval Women and Gender Index
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10 Record(s) Found in our database
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1.
Record Number:
43476
Author(s):
Wolsing, Ivo,
Contributor(s):
Title :
“Look, there comes the half-man!” Delegitimising Tancred of Lecce in Peter of Eboli’s
Liber ad honorem Augusti
Source:
Al-Masaq: Journal of the Medieval Mediterranean , 31., 3 ( 2019): Pages 323 - 337. Available with a subscription from Taylor & Francis Online:
https://doi.org/10.1080/09503110.2018.1557480
Year of Publication:
2019.
2.
Record Number:
3962
Author(s):
Clark, Robert. L. A.
Contributor(s):
Title :
Queering "Orientalism": The East as Closet in Said, Ackerley, and the Medieval Christian West [The author briefly analyzes a play, "Miracle la fille d'un Roy," based on "Yde et Olive," in which the main character Ysabel assumes a masculine identity and ends up married to the princess of Byzantium before her gender is revealed].
Source:
Medieval Encounters: Jewish, Christian, and Muslim Culture in Confluence and Dialogue , 5., 3 ( 1999): Pages 336 - 349.
Year of Publication:
1999.
3.
Record Number:
5352
Author(s):
Niyogi, Ruma.
Contributor(s):
Title :
The Exotic among the Other: Writing Women in Byzantine Studies
Source:
Byzantine Studies Conference. Abstracts of Papers , 25., ( 1999): Pages 101 - 102.
Year of Publication:
1999.
4.
Record Number:
7209
Author(s):
Kane, Stuart A.
Contributor(s):
Title :
Now the First Stone is Set: Christine de Pisan and the Colonial City [The author argues that Christine de Pizan in both the "Livre de la cite des dames" and the "Ditie de Jehanne d'Arc" advances a prophetic vision of a Francocentric domination of the East. He focuses in particular on the characters of Semiramis, Zenobia, and Dido. Title note supplied by Feminae.]
Source:
Comitatus , 29., ( 1998): Pages 76 - 94.
Year of Publication:
1998.
5.
Record Number:
3914
Author(s):
Dunkelman, Martha Levine.
Contributor(s):
Title :
Between Despair and Ecstasy: Marco Polo's Life of the Buddha [The author explores Polo's accounts of Asian sexuality; Polo is not a missionary and celebrates Oriental sexual difference with tolerance].
Source:
Exemplaria: A Journal of Theory in Medieval and Renaissance Studies , 9., 1 (Spring 1997): Pages 189 - 229.
Year of Publication:
1997.
6.
Record Number:
1583
Author(s):
Schibanoff, Susan.
Contributor(s):
Title :
Worlds Apart: Orientalism, Antifeminism, and Heresy in Chaucer's "Man of Law's Tale" [heresy includes both Islam and the Lollard movement which is mentioned in the "Epilogue" to the "Man of Law's Tale"].
Source:
Exemplaria: A Journal of Theory in Medieval and Renaissance Studies , 8., 1 (Spring 1996): Pages 59 - 96.
Year of Publication:
1996.
7.
Record Number:
49
Author(s):
Lynch, Kathryn L.
Contributor(s):
Title :
East Meets West in Chaucer's Squire's and Franklin's Tales
Source:
Speculum
(Full Text via JSTOR) 70 (1995): 530-551.
Link Info
Year of Publication:
1995.
8.
Record Number:
234
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title :
Converting Alibech: "Nunc Spiritu Copuleris"
Source:
Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies , 25., 2 (Spring 1995): Pages 207 - 227.
Year of Publication:
1995.
9.
Record Number:
436
Author(s):
Kinoshita, Sharon.
Contributor(s):
Title :
Politics of Courtly Love: "La Prise d' Orange" and The Conversion of the Saracen Queen
Source:
Romanic Review , 86., 2 (March 1995): Pages 265 - 287. Special issue: The Production of Knowledge: Institutionalizing Sex, Gender, and Sexualiity in Medieval Discourse. Ed. by Kathryn Gravdal.
Year of Publication:
1995.
10.
Record Number:
7346
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title :
Geographies of Desire: Orientalism in Chaucer's Legend of Good Women [The author compares cultural and racial forms of medieval alterity with the category of gender in the Legend of Good Women. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source:
Chaucer Yearbook , 1., ( 1992): Pages 1 - 32.
Year of Publication:
1992.