ABSTRACT

This collection brings together two flourishing areas of medieval scholarship: gender and religion. It examines gender-specific religious practices and contends that the pursuit of holiness can destabilise binary gender itself. Though saints may be classified as masculine or feminine, holiness may also cut across gender divisions and demand a break from normally gendered behaviour. This work of interdisciplinary cultural history includes contributions from historians, art historians and literary critics and will be of interest not only to medievalists, but also to students of religion and gender in any period.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction Gender and holiness

Performance and representation in the later Middle Ages

chapter 1|14 pages

‘The law of sin that is in my members’

The problem of male embodiment

chapter 3|13 pages

Virginal effects

Text and identity in Ancrene Wisse

chapter 6|15 pages

Becoming a virgin king

Richard II and Edward the Confessor

chapter 7|20 pages

Female piety and impiety

Selected images of women in wall paintings in England after 1300

chapter 10|22 pages

Ecce Homo