MIMSS Transnational Seminar: Embodying female spirituality: a transnational view

OMS ma

 

Session 1: Communities 2-3.30

Diana Denissen, Université de Lausanne, Post-doc Fellow, Swiss National Science Foundation

“Alijt Bake’s Performative Piety”

My presentation will focus on the Dutch nun Alijt Bake and her fifteenth-century text Boexcken van mijn beghin ende voortganck (‘Book on my beginnings and progress’). I will first elaborate on Bake’s performative piety, the embodiment of her spirituality and the relationship between images and emotions in her text. Then, I will explore how Bake’s visual and performative experiences are connected to her religious community. How is Bake’s life story intertwined with the history of her convent (Galilea in Ghent) and the reform movement of the Devotio Moderna?

 

Godelinde Perk, Marie S. Curie Fellow, University of Oxford

“A Contemplative Life For Me: Solitude and Community in The Book of Margery Kempe and Continental Sisterbooks”

Self-styled saint Margery Kempe seeks a highly private relationship with Christ, but also prompts a stranger's wish that she “were enclosed in a house of stone”; Modern Devout Sisters attempt to withdraw from the community to study on their own, but with disastrous consequences for their posthumous fate. Biographical texts by medieval holy women, such as the Book, and Middle Dutch and Middle High German Sister-books are shot through with both anxiety about withdrawing from particular communities and attention to its mystical potential. Ultimately, this paper illuminates their significance to the history of vernacular theology and argues for a more comparative, pan-European approach to medieval women’s mysticism.

Sylvia Alvares-Correa, Faculty of History, University of Oxford

“Made in the Netherlands or made in Iberia? Manuscripts featuring Netherlandish miniatures and Iberian texts”

I will examine a group of Netherlandish Books of Hours whose distinctive codicological features propose that while their miniatures were supplied by Netherlandish illuminators, their text was written by an Iberian scribe, working either in the South Netherlands or in Spain or Portugal.  If this holds true, it suggests that the (primarily) female patrons of these manuscripts favoured Netherlandish images for their devotional books, but nonetheless turned to native scribes to supply the text elements.

 

Coffee break: 3.30-4

 

Session 2: Nuns’ letters and the art of networking

Laura Camino, Universidade Santiago de Compostela

“Embodying emotions in the epistolary exchange between Baudri of Bourgueil and Constance of Le Ronceray (Loraine, XI century)”

This paper will examine what dynamics of identity and gender can be extracted from the exchange of elegiac letters in Latin between the archbishop of Dol, Baudri of Bourgueil, and the nun Constance of Le Ronceray (Loria, France, eleventh and twelfth centuries).

Verònica Zaragoza, Juan de la Cierva Post-doc Fellow, UNED, Madrid – Project BIESES

Poetic Manuscripts of the Catalan Discalced Carmelites: Lyric Poetry, Music and Theater by Women (Crown of Aragon, 16th-18th centuries)

 I will present a series of manuscript poems written in Spanish by Catalan nuns in the 16th and 18th centuries, which were discovered in the archives of the convents of Barcelona and Vic (Spain). I will examine how poetic writing became a creative practice in Discalced Carmelite convents, under the influence of the founder, Teresa de Jesús. I am particularly interested in analyzing the theatrical and musical contexts in which this poetry was created.

Henrike Lähnemann, Edmund Wareham, and Konstantin Winters, St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford

“The Nuns’ Network (Lüne letters)”-Project

The ‘Nuns’ Network’ gives access to the correspondence of the Benedictine nuns of Lüne between ca. 1460 and 1555. Comprising nearly 1800 letters written in Latin, Low German and a characteristic mix of both languages, is a unique testimony of female writing in the Middle Ages. The edition brings to light a forgotten culture of late medieval letter-writing. The nuns formed a network of religious, social and economic alliance through the whole Hanseatic region in their correspondence with important political and religious powers of their time and in the ‘intranet’ of the daily exchange with the neighbouring convents on the Lüneburg Heath. <http://medingen.seh.ox.ac.uk/

 

Organizer: María Morrás, Magdalen College-MIMS

Magdalen Iberian Medieval Studies Seminar

mimss@magd.ox.ac.uk

 

Image: Vision of Dorothea of Meding in Kloster Lüne, ca. 1634 (http://www.inschriften.net/suchergebnis/ treffer/nr/di076-0221.html)