Introduction; 1. The reform of marriage; 2. The Bride of Christ; 3. The ambiguities of motherhood; 4. The Mother of the Faithful; 5. Fathers and sons; 6. Fathers in the spirit; Conclusion: the stumbling block.
Introduction; 1. The reform of marriage; 2. The Bride of Christ; 3. The ambiguities of motherhood; 4. The Mother of the Faithful; 5. Fathers and sons; 6. Fathers in the spirit; Conclusion: The stumbling block.
Examines the debates over ecclesiastical reform in western Europe during the high Middle Ages from a new perspective.
Megan McLaughlin is Associate Professor of History, with additional appointments in the Departments of Gender and Women's Studies, and Religion, at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Her research interests focus particularly on two areas of medieval European history: the intersection between religion and social/economic/culture structures; and the history of women and gender in medieval Europe. Her previous publications include Consorting with Saints: Prayer for the Dead in Early Medieval France (1994).
'… superb … McLaughlin argues her point in lively and subtly
amusing prose, sparked with effective quotations of medieval
authors. Her book is perfect for classes on medieval politics and
churches … Non-specialists can easily follow the argument, while
fellow medievalists will appreciate the book's methodological
innovations and evidentiary heft, and feminists will be glad to
discover that it considerably advances the scholarly project of
gendering the medieval past.' Lisa M. Bitel, The American
Historical Review
'It is seldom that a book has the ability to make one fundamentally
question one's previous assumptions and see things from an entirely
new perspective, particularly when as here the subject matter is
one that will be so very familiar to historians of eleventh- and
twelfth-century Europe. This book, however, does just that …
McLaughlin offers a thoughtful, highly nuanced and altogether new
(and quite probably apposite) interpretation of the conceptual
ferment and domestic/sexual imagery that animated the polemicists
and thinkers of the age of reform. All of this makes [this book]
indispensable reading.' Kathleen G. Cushing, Early Medieval Europe
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