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Civics, Medieval History - Social Aspects, Success, Motivation & Self-Esteem, Women's History - Europe - Great Britain, Medieval English Literature - Chaucer - Literary Criticism, English Fiction & Prose Literature - General & Miscellaneous - Literary Cri
Clean Maids, True Wives, Steadfast Widows by Margaret Hallissy β€” book cover

Clean Maids, True Wives, Steadfast Widows

by Margaret Hallissy
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Overview

Chaucer was a keen observer of the lives of women with a remarkable ability to see beyond his culture's preconceptions concerning their proper roles. The lives of medieval women were divided into three estates--virginity, wifehood, and widowhood--each with complex rules extending to particulars of speech and dress, but all directed toward the single purpose of preserving female chastity, for which a woman was to be prepared to suffer or even die. Margaret Hallissy's lively and literate study traces Chaucer's female characterizations against a background of medieval rules and common assumptions governing women to determine where he adhered to or departed from the behavioral norms. She concludes that he discounted much of these codes of conduct as being detrimental to the development of a full human person. The Wife of Bath, Chaucer's most drastic deviation from the received wisdom about women of his day, could only have been developed by an author/narrator who turned from the prescribed written rules--which, sacred or secular, were all instruments of patriarchal power--to female discourse and action. Applying insights from the works of modern social historians of the Middle Ages and ranging widely in sources from the visual arts, civil and canon law, homiletics, theology, architecture, fashion history, and medicine, Hallissy illuminates the preconceptions with which Chaucer's original audience would have encountered his work and brings her findings to bear on a close analysis of literary characters in the text. The resulting study provides an original and essential dimension for reading Chaucer, while its feminist-historicist approach broadens the audience to those interested inmedieval studies and women's studies in general.

About the Author, Margaret Hallissy

MARGARET HALLISSY is Professor of English at C.W. Post College, Long Island University, where her specialty is medieval literature, especially with regard to women.

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Editorials

Library Journal

Interesting alike as feminist history, medieval sociology, and Chaucer criticism, this book explores in depth the three received ``estates'' of women in Chaucer's day--virginity, wifehood, and widowhood. Hallisy (English, C.W. Post Coll.) rightly sees Chaucer as perceptive and sensitive to women as individuals, as well as to what would today be called ``women's issues,'' in a time when, in the words of the Wife of Bath, ``men han wrot the bokes.'' While both readable and enjoyable, this study is highly academic, reading like an underrevised dissertation in its surfeit of unnecessary footnotes (e.g., a statement as simple as ``Chaucer liked women'' is attributed). Still, it far surpasses anything else on the subject and should long be the accepted feminist Chaucer. Recommended for larger academic libraries.-- Robert E. Brown, Onondaga Cty. P.L., Syracuse, N.Y.

Book Details

Published
February 1, 1993
Publisher
Westport, Conn. : Greenwood Press, 1993.
Pages
248
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780313274671

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