Feminae: Medieval Women and Gender Index
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4 Record(s) Found in our database
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1.
Record Number:
367
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title :
Woman, Authority, and the Book in the Middle Ages [a female author's response to Richard de Fournival's "Bestiaire d' Amour"].
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. Pages 61 - 69.
Year of Publication:
1995.
2.
Record Number:
1875
Author(s):
Solterer, Helen.
Contributor(s):
Title :
Seeing, Hearing, Tasting Women: Medieval Senses of Reading [comparison of the woman reader's five senses in the "Bestiaire d'Amour" and the response by an anonymous woman author].
Source:
Comparative Literature
(Full Text via JSTOR) 46, 2 (Spring 1994): 129-145.
Link Info
Year of Publication:
1994.
3.
Record Number:
11041
Author(s):
Beer, Jeanette Mary Ayres.
Contributor(s):
Title :
A Fourteenth-century 'Bestiaire d'amour' [The author studies MS. New York Pierpont Morgan Library 459, and shows it to be an unconventional derivative of the earlier "Bestiaire d'amour," produced by a scribe who seems to have had little knowledge of its original author. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source:
Reinardus: Yearbook of the International Reynard Society , 4., ( 1991): Pages 19 - 26.
Year of Publication:
1991.
4.
Record Number:
11671
Author(s):
Contributor(s):
Title :
Sexual Discourse through the Image of the Unicorn in Richard de Fournival's "Bestiaire d' amour" and "Response" [The author contrasts Richard de Fournival's use of the unicorn with that of the woman who wrote the "Response." For Richard the unicorn symbolizes men who are victims of unloving women, while the woman sees the unicorn as the man who deceives with "soft words." Title note supplied by Feminae.].
Source:
Romance Languages Annual , 3., ( 1991): Pages 108 - 110.
Year of Publication:
1991.