Moving Women Moving Objects (400–1500): Maps, Spaces, Cultures, cartea 2
Editat de Tracy Chapman Hamilton, Mariah Proctor-Tiffanyen Limba Engleză Hardback – 28 aug 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004363441
ISBN-10: 9004363440
Pagini: 376
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 27 mm
Greutate: 0.73 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Maps, Spaces, Cultures
ISBN-10: 9004363440
Pagini: 376
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 27 mm
Greutate: 0.73 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Maps, Spaces, Cultures
Cuprins
Foreword
Acknowledgments
List of Figures
Contributors
Introduction: Women and the Circulation of Material Culture: Crossing Boundaries and Connecting Spaces
Tracy Chapman Hamilton and Mariah Proctor-Tiffany
1 Mapping Gold in Motion: Women and Jewelry from Early Medieval Scandinavia
Nancy L. Wicker
2 Remembrance and Erasure of Objects Belonging to Rus’ Princesses in Medieval Western Sources: the Cases of Anastasia Iaroslavna’s “Saber of Charlemagne” and Anna Iaroslavna’s Red Gem
Talia Zajac
3 Symbolic Geography in the Tomb and Seal of Berengaria of Navarre, Queen of England
Kathleen Nolan
4 Matilda of Saxony’s Luxury Objects in Motion: Salving the Wounds of Conflict
Jitske Jasperse
5 Female Networks and the Circulation of a Late Medieval Illustrated Health Guide
Jennifer Borland
6 Saint Birgitta of Sweden: Movement, Place, and Visionary Experience
Benjamin Zweig
7 The Place of a Queen/A Queen and Her Places: Jeanne of Navarre’s Kalila and Dimna as a Political Manuscript in Early Fourteenth-Century France
Amanda Luyster
8 Of Movement, Monarchs, and Manuscripts: the Case for Jeanne II of Navarre’s Picture Bible as a Geopolitical Bridge between Paris and Pamplona
Julia Finch
9 The Personal Geography of a Dowager Queen: Isabella of France and Her Inventory
Anne Rudloff Stanton
10 Moving Possessions and Secure Posthumous Reputation: the Gifts of Jeanne of Burgundy (ca. 1293–1349)
Marguerite Keane
11 Valentina Visconti’s Trousseau: Mapping Identity through the Transport of Jewels
Diane Antille
12 Moving Women and Their Moving Objects: Zoe (Sophia) Palaiologina and Anna Palaiologina Notaras as Cultural Translators
Lana Sloutsky
13 The Shoes of an Infanta: Bringing the Sensuous, Not Sensible, “Spanish Style” of Catherine of Aragon to Tudor England
Theresa Earenfight
Acknowledgments
List of Figures
Contributors
Introduction: Women and the Circulation of Material Culture: Crossing Boundaries and Connecting Spaces
Tracy Chapman Hamilton and Mariah Proctor-Tiffany
1 Mapping Gold in Motion: Women and Jewelry from Early Medieval Scandinavia
Nancy L. Wicker
2 Remembrance and Erasure of Objects Belonging to Rus’ Princesses in Medieval Western Sources: the Cases of Anastasia Iaroslavna’s “Saber of Charlemagne” and Anna Iaroslavna’s Red Gem
Talia Zajac
3 Symbolic Geography in the Tomb and Seal of Berengaria of Navarre, Queen of England
Kathleen Nolan
4 Matilda of Saxony’s Luxury Objects in Motion: Salving the Wounds of Conflict
Jitske Jasperse
5 Female Networks and the Circulation of a Late Medieval Illustrated Health Guide
Jennifer Borland
6 Saint Birgitta of Sweden: Movement, Place, and Visionary Experience
Benjamin Zweig
7 The Place of a Queen/A Queen and Her Places: Jeanne of Navarre’s Kalila and Dimna as a Political Manuscript in Early Fourteenth-Century France
Amanda Luyster
8 Of Movement, Monarchs, and Manuscripts: the Case for Jeanne II of Navarre’s Picture Bible as a Geopolitical Bridge between Paris and Pamplona
Julia Finch
9 The Personal Geography of a Dowager Queen: Isabella of France and Her Inventory
Anne Rudloff Stanton
10 Moving Possessions and Secure Posthumous Reputation: the Gifts of Jeanne of Burgundy (ca. 1293–1349)
Marguerite Keane
11 Valentina Visconti’s Trousseau: Mapping Identity through the Transport of Jewels
Diane Antille
12 Moving Women and Their Moving Objects: Zoe (Sophia) Palaiologina and Anna Palaiologina Notaras as Cultural Translators
Lana Sloutsky
13 The Shoes of an Infanta: Bringing the Sensuous, Not Sensible, “Spanish Style” of Catherine of Aragon to Tudor England
Theresa Earenfight
Notă biografică
Tracy Chapman Hamilton, (Ph.D. 2004, University of Texas at Austin) is Visiting Associate Professor of Art History at Virginia Commonwealth University. She is the author of Pleasure and Politics at the Court of France: The Artistic Patronage of Queen Marie de Brabant (1260–1321) (Brepols, 2018).
Mariah Proctor-Tiffany, (Ph.D. 2007, Brown University) is Associate Professor of Art History at California State University, Long Beach. She is the author of Medieval Art in Motion: The Inventory and Gift Giving of Queen Clémence de Hongrie (Pennsylvania State University Press, 2019).
Mariah Proctor-Tiffany, (Ph.D. 2007, Brown University) is Associate Professor of Art History at California State University, Long Beach. She is the author of Medieval Art in Motion: The Inventory and Gift Giving of Queen Clémence de Hongrie (Pennsylvania State University Press, 2019).
Recenzii
"This is an important work for medievalists, but sufficient contextual detail is provided to enable the nonspecialist to approach each topic, a significant feature in a work covering such a range of material and one which expands its usefulness to researchers in other fields, most notably court and women’s studies."
- Sara Smart, University of Exeter. In: Renaissance Quarterly, Volume LXXIV, No. 1 pp. 273-275.
"[...] this book is an important contribution to the study of medieval women, demonstrating the utility of ideas around the agency of objects for supplementing and revising extant evidence about their worlds. [...] the strengths of this volume suggest the need for continued attention to movement and mobility at all levels of society and for many different kinds of aesthetic objects."
- Michelle K. Oing, Stanford University. In: Speculum, 96/4 (October 2021), pp. 1178-1180.
"The chapters are fluently written and well-researched[...]The capacity to reveal new geographies, to show how women and their things created places united across space, interlacing diverse spheres, is the major contribution of this volume and opens the door to further studies of medieval and early modern women through the lens of materiality in motion". Erin J. Cambell in Early Modern Women: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2021.
"Given such broad geographical and temporal variety, it is worth noting the consistently high quality of the essays. This is surely due in part to the efforts of the editors, who appear to have been quite involved in the shaping and level of finish of each essay as well as in the conception of the volume as a whole. A sense of commitment, common purpose, enjoyment, and collaborative engagement comes through in the many cross-references that populate the footnotes [...] Moving Women Moving Objects is excellent in itself and sets a high standard for future collaborative work on “object itineraries” that is global in its reach."
-Sarah McNamer, Georgetown University. In:The Medieval Review
- Sara Smart, University of Exeter. In: Renaissance Quarterly, Volume LXXIV, No. 1 pp. 273-275.
"[...] this book is an important contribution to the study of medieval women, demonstrating the utility of ideas around the agency of objects for supplementing and revising extant evidence about their worlds. [...] the strengths of this volume suggest the need for continued attention to movement and mobility at all levels of society and for many different kinds of aesthetic objects."
- Michelle K. Oing, Stanford University. In: Speculum, 96/4 (October 2021), pp. 1178-1180.
"The chapters are fluently written and well-researched[...]The capacity to reveal new geographies, to show how women and their things created places united across space, interlacing diverse spheres, is the major contribution of this volume and opens the door to further studies of medieval and early modern women through the lens of materiality in motion". Erin J. Cambell in Early Modern Women: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2021.
"Given such broad geographical and temporal variety, it is worth noting the consistently high quality of the essays. This is surely due in part to the efforts of the editors, who appear to have been quite involved in the shaping and level of finish of each essay as well as in the conception of the volume as a whole. A sense of commitment, common purpose, enjoyment, and collaborative engagement comes through in the many cross-references that populate the footnotes [...] Moving Women Moving Objects is excellent in itself and sets a high standard for future collaborative work on “object itineraries” that is global in its reach."
-Sarah McNamer, Georgetown University. In:The Medieval Review