Exploring Old English texts ranging from Beowulf to AElfric's Lives of Saints, this book examines ways that women's monastic, material, and devotional practices in Anglo-Saxon England shaped literary representations of women and femininity. Horner argues that these representations derive from a "discourse" of female monastic enclosure, based on the increasingly strict rules of cloistered confinement that regulated the female religious body in the early Middle Ages. She shows that the female subjects of much Old English literature are enclosed by many layers--literal and figurative, textual,...
Exploring Old English texts ranging from Beowulf to AElfric's Lives of Saints, this book examines ways that women's monastic, material, and devotional...