Looking for Joy in Late Medieval Scotland
3 June, University of Edinburgh & online – free

Dr Kate Ash-Irisarri’s work-in-progress talk will investigate the representation & textual performance of joy, mirth, delight, solace, & wonder in late medieval Scottish literature

@litstudies

https://www.iash.ed.ac.uk/event/dr-kate-ash-irisarri-looking-joy-late-medieval-scotland

#Scottish #literature #medieval #latemedieval #medievalliterature

Dr Kate Ash-Irisarri: "Looking for Joy in Late Medieval Scotland" | IASH

Ending today's set of books on the #MiddleAges chronologically, this essay collection edited by Daisy Black & Katharine Goodland highlights continuities & transformations in early English plays from #medieval to #Renaissance drama

#EnglishLiterature #MedievalLiterature #EarlyModernDrama

Reading medieval romances with philosophical theory from Leibniz to Kant, Gadamer, Latour & others, James & Peggy Knapp present a study on 6 core works of #MedievalLiterature and the relation between #aesthetics & reality within them

#MiddleAges #LiteraryStudies #Hermeneutics

5 new arrivals on the #MiddleAges for the middle of the week!
This book by Ian Cornelius attempts a reconstruction of #alliteration in #MedievalLiterature such as Caedmon's Hymn, Beowulf, Sir Gawain & the Green Knight or Piers Plowman

#EnglishLiterature #metre #MedievalPoetry #LiteraryStudies

𝑳𝒊𝒕𝒆𝒓𝒂𝒓𝒚 𝑵𝒐𝒎𝒂𝒅𝒔 - 𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑶𝒓𝒊𝒈𝒊𝒏𝒂𝒍 𝑶𝒎𝒆𝒍𝒂𝒔: 𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑪𝒂𝒔𝒆 𝒐𝒇 𝒕𝒉𝒆 𝑨𝒏𝒊𝒎𝒂𝒍𝒔 𝒗𝒔. 𝑴𝒂𝒏

And when the child cannot speak for itself?

Humanity's first global lawsuit! In this 10th-century Islamic fable, animals put mankind on trial for the crimes of the extraction economy.

https://waywordsstudio.com/podcasts/waywords_podcast/original-omelas-case-animals-versus-man/

#podcast #literature #arabicliterature #medievalliterature #petersinger #ursulakleguin #donnaharaway #aristotle #francisbacon #jacquesderrida #speciesism

“‘Done is a Battell’ is not only a religious work but also a heroic poem depicting the triumph of good over evil, life over death, light over dark”

—Courtney Brown discusses Dunbar’s poem, & provides a full gloss, on the University of Stirling’s That Scots Lit Blog

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https://thatscotslitblog.wordpress.com/2017/11/23/william-dunbar-done-is-a-battell-on-the-dragon-blak/

#Scottish #literature #poem #poetry #medieval #medievalliterature #Easter #Scots #Scotslanguage

William Dunbar, “Done is a Battell on the Dragon Blak”

William Dunbar, “Done is a Battell on the Dragon Blak” Edited and Introduced by Courtney Brown   Little biographical information is available for many poets in Early Modern Scotlan…

That Scots Lit Blog

Done is a battell on the dragon blak,
Our campioun Chryst confoundit hes his force;
The ȝettis of hell ar brokin with a crak,
The signe triumphall rasit is of the croce…

—William Dunbar, c.1460–1520. The poem was most likely written when Dunbar was at James IV’s court

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#Scottish #literature #poem #poetry #medieval #medievalliterature #Easter #Scots #Scotslanguage

Copy in a parchemnt of a few verses from the “Book of Good Love”, one of the classics of Spanish literature, by a cleric in town. Hita, Spain 🇪🇸, 17th February 2024.

https://wp.me/p2yJaA-2Na

#Hita #Spain #España #Espana #HitaSpain
#Medieval #literature #LibroDelBuenAmor #ArcipresteDeHita #BookOfGoodLove #MedievalLiterature
#travel #travelling #traveling #travelphotography #tourism
#JBinnacle
Two new book purchases this week. #medievalliterature

Christine de Pizan: Europe’s First Professional Female Writer

Sometimes, while wandering in unexpected places, we stumble upon voices that seem to have been waiting for us. That is how I first encountered Christine de Pizan, not in a history book, but while browsing Project Gutenberg.

Born in Venice around 1364, Christine moved to France as a child when her father, Tommaso di Benvenuto da Pizzano, was invited to serve as astrologer and scholar at the court of Charles V. Thanks to him, she had something rare for a girl of her time — access to books, ideas, and learning.

At fifteen, she married Estienne de Castel, a court secretary. Their marriage was a happy one, but after just ten years she was left widowed, with her mother and three young children to support. Out of grief and necessity, Christine turned to writing. Out of that choice, she became something extraordinary: Europe’s first professional female writer.

Christine de Pizan (sitting) lecturing to a group of men standing photography The British Library Board, Harley a compendium of Christine de Pizan’s works commissioned in 1413, produced by her scriptorium in Paris.

The Gift of Her Pen

Christine began with poems of mourning, ballades written to the memory of her husband. They touched hearts and brought her recognition. From there, her voice grew: ballads, rondeaux, and lays, always infused with sincerity. Her talent carried her words into the hands of dukes, queens, and princes.

She did not stop at poetry. Her prose works reveal both imagination and courage. In The Book of the City of Ladies (1405), she envisioned an allegorical city built of women’s achievements, stone by stone, guided by the voices of Reason, Rectitude, and Justice. In its companion, The Treasure of the City of Ladies, she offered women practical counsel on living with dignity and strength, no matter their station in life.

And Christine kept writing: reflections on her own life, a biography of King Charles V, and volumes that displayed a dazzling range of knowledge and insight. Her pen had become both her livelihood and her legacy.

A Voice for Her Time

Her life unfolded during political upheaval. After France’s devastating loss at Agincourt in 1415, Christine retired to a convent. Yet even there, her voice was not silent. In 1429, she wrote a final profound poem: Le Ditié de Jehanne d’Arc.

It is a joyous hymn to Joan of Arc’s early victories and the only French poem about Joan written while she was still alive. What a closing chapter: a woman writer, celebrating a woman warrior.

Why Christine Still Matters

Christine’s story holds within it both privilege and loss. She began with the advantages of a father’s library at the French court, yet she endured widowhood, financial struggle, and the responsibility of raising children. Out of these contrasts came a voice that still astonishes us today.

Her words still speak with clarity and conviction:

“If it were customary to send little girls to school and to teach them the same subjects as are taught boys, they would learn just as fully and understand the subtleties of all the arts and sciences.” The Book of the City of Ladies

“This is the beginning of the book that Dame Christine de Pisan made for all great queens, ladies and princesses. And first, how they ought to love and fear God.” The Treasure of the City of Ladies (Penguin Classics translation)

Christine’s city of ladies was not just allegory. It was prophecy. In it. She gave women a place of belonging. Six centuries later, we can still walk through those gates and hear her voice: courageous, wise, and profoundly human.

Until the next page turns,

Rebecca

#christineDePizan #courtlyLiterature #fictionSalon #medievalLiterature #nonFictionSalon #projectGutenberg #rebeccasReadingRoom