Medieval Domesticity: Home, Housing and Household in Medieval England
Cambridge University Press, 12/18/2008
EAN 9780521899208, ISBN10: 0521899206
Hardcover, 332 pages, 23.4 x 15.7 x 2.1 cm
Language: English
What did 'home' mean to men and women in the period 1200–1500? This volume explores the many cultural, material and ideological dimensions of the concept of domesticity. Leading scholars examine not only the material cultures of domesticity, gender, and power relations within the household, but also how they were envisioned in texts, images, objects and architecture. Many of the essays argue that England witnessed the emergence of a distinctive bourgeois ideology of domesticity during the late Middle Ages. But the volume also contends that, although the world of the great lord was far removed from that of the artisan or peasant, these social groups all occupied physical structures that constituted homes in which people were drawn together by ties of kinship, service or neighbourliness. This pioneering study will appeal to scholars of medieval English society, literature and culture.
1. Introduction P. J. P. Goldberg and Maryanne Kowaleski
2. 'Burgeis' domesticity in late medieval England Felicity Riddy
3. Buttery and pantry, and their antecedents
idea and architecture in the English medieval house Mark Gardiner
4. Building domesticity in the city
English urban housing before the Black Death Sarah Rees Jones
5. Urban and rural houses and households in the late Middle Ages
a case study from Yorkshire Jane Grenville
6. The fashioning of bourgeois domesticity in later medieval England
a material culture perspective P. J. P. Goldberg
7. Nuns at home
the domesticity of sacred space Marilyn Oliva
8. 'Which may be said to be her own'
widows and personal property in late medieval England Janet Loengard
9. Weeping for the virtuous wife
laymen, affective piety, and Chaucer's Clerk's Tale Nicole Nolan Sidhu
10. On the sadness of not being a bird
late medieval marriage ideologies and the figure of Abraham in William Langland's Piers Plowman Isabel Davis
11. Household games and women's erotic education Nicola McDonald
12. Home visits
Mary, Elizabeth, Margery Kempe, and the feast of the Visitation Mary C. Erler.
'... an excellent, multi-disciplinary study of the contents and meaning of the late medieval English household and home.' The Medieval Review