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Medieval women, material culture, and power : Matilda Plantagenet and her sisters / by Jitske Jasperse.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Gender and power in the premodern worldPublisher: Leeds : Arc Humanities Press, [2020]Copyright date: �2020Description: 1 online resource (x, 134 pages) : illustrations, mapsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 1641891467
  • 1641891459
  • 9781641891455
  • 9781641891462
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Medieval women, material culture, and power.DDC classification:
  • 943.21024092 23
LOC classification:
  • DD801.S364
Online resources:
Contents:
Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS -- USAGE AND CONVENTIONS -- PREFACE -- INTRODUCTION: MATERIAL CULTURE AND PERFORMANCE OF POWER -- Chapter 1. Staging the Bride and her Treasure -- Chapter 2. Small Items Making Big Impressions: Coins and Seals -- Chapter 3. Devotion and Dynasty on Parchment -- Chapter 4. Trappings Vested with Power -- Epilogue: Materializing Power and Its Afterlife -- Select Bibliography -- Index
Summary: "This book argues that the impressive range of belongings that can be connected to Matilda Plantagenet, duchess of Saxony--textiles, illuminated manuscripts, coins, chronicles, charters, and literary texts--and her sisters allows us to perceive elite women's performance of power, even when they are largely absent from the official documentary account. The material traces connected to Matilda and some of her contemporaries show the importance of women as makers of material culture, as well as the dual agency of women and their objects in the consolidation of their very real, if all but unwritten, power. It is especially through the visual record of material culture that we can hear female voices, showing that women were capable of impacting their own lives as well as that of others, even if charters and chronicles fail to mention so. This forces us to redefine assumptions about power for sparsely-documented noblewomen"--Publisher's description
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

"This book argues that the impressive range of belongings that can be connected to Matilda Plantagenet, duchess of Saxony--textiles, illuminated manuscripts, coins, chronicles, charters, and literary texts--and her sisters allows us to perceive elite women's performance of power, even when they are largely absent from the official documentary account. The material traces connected to Matilda and some of her contemporaries show the importance of women as makers of material culture, as well as the dual agency of women and their objects in the consolidation of their very real, if all but unwritten, power. It is especially through the visual record of material culture that we can hear female voices, showing that women were capable of impacting their own lives as well as that of others, even if charters and chronicles fail to mention so. This forces us to redefine assumptions about power for sparsely-documented noblewomen"--Publisher's description

Online resource; title from resource home page (OAPEN, viewed May 8, 2020).

Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS -- USAGE AND CONVENTIONS -- PREFACE -- INTRODUCTION: MATERIAL CULTURE AND PERFORMANCE OF POWER -- Chapter 1. Staging the Bride and her Treasure -- Chapter 2. Small Items Making Big Impressions: Coins and Seals -- Chapter 3. Devotion and Dynasty on Parchment -- Chapter 4. Trappings Vested with Power -- Epilogue: Materializing Power and Its Afterlife -- Select Bibliography -- Index

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