Feminae: Medieval Women and Gender Index
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1.
Record Number:
10645
Author(s):
Karkov, Catherine E.
Contributor(s):
Title :
Broken Bodies and Singing Tongues: Gender and Voice in the Cambridge, Corpus Christi College 23 "Psychomachia" [The author argues that the Anglo-Saxon reader of the "Psychomachia" and the "Passio Sancti Romani" (also by Prudentius) was encouraged through text and illustrations to see the self as masculine and the body as feminine. Karkov notes that the Anglo-Saxon "Psychomachia" manuscripts were the first to depict the Virtues and Vices as primarily female, rather than the earlier practice of Virtues as male warriors and the Vices as monsters. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source:
Anglo-Saxon England , 30., ( 2001): Pages 115 - 136.
Year of Publication:
2001.