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Early British Survey

  • Early British Literature
  • Gender and Sexuality
    • Key Terms on Queer Themes in the Middle Ages
      • Queer Torture in the Middle Ages and Beowulf
      • Queer Acceptance in the Middle Ages and Sir Gawain and The Green Knight
    • Eve: More Than Just the First Woman
      • Eve: A Rebel in Paradise
      • Eve: The First Queer Woman
    • Gendered Betrayal in Medieval Arthurian Myths
      • Forbidden Love’s Betrayal
      • Punishments of Treason
    • Magic and Femininity
      • Magic and Femininity in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
      • Magic and Femininity in The Faerie Queene
    • Magic and Gender in Arthurian Romance Poetry
      • Magic and Gender in “Lanval”
      • Magic and Gender in “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight”
    • 50 Shades of Courtly Love
      • Dominator in Love and Life
      • The Hue of Female Power
    • Adultery in the Middle Ages
      • Adultery in “Lanval”
      • Adultery in “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight”
    • Representations Of Femininity In Morality Plays
      • Femininity In Everyman
      • Femininity In Doctor Faustus
    • Monsters and Women
      • BEOWULF AND GRENDELS’ MOTHER
      • Satan and Sin
  • Politics, Power, and Economics
    • Shifting of Political and Economic Structures
      • Feudalism in Gawain and the Green Knight
      • Paradise Lost and Tracing the Fall of Feudalism
    • Knighthood in the Middle Ages
      • knighthood in “Lanval”
      • Knighthood in “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight”
    • The Divine Right to Rule: Past Perceptions of Monarchy
      • Sir Gawain and the Green Knight: A Condescending Commentary on the Monarchy?
      • The Faerie Queene: Spenser’s Ode To Queen Elizabeth I
    • Chivalry & Identity in Early Brit Lit
      • Chivalry in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight: the Establishing of a Literary British Identity
      • Chivalry in the Faerie Queen: Continuing to Establish British Identity
  • Religion
    • GOD: Humanity’s Most Influential Literary Figure
      • My Pain, Your Pain, His Gain: What God Means to Margery Kempe and Julian of Norwich
      • Respect My Authority: How God Rules Over Creation in Everyman & Paradise Lost
    • Imitatio Christi: How Doctor Faustus and Everyman Mimic Jesus through Suffering
      • Imitatio Christi: How Antagonists Mimic Christ
      • Imitatio Christi: Satan as a Jesus Figure
    • Depictions of the Devil in British Literature
      • Faustus: To Laugh Is To Be Against Evil
      • The Devil As Sympathetic: Human Qualities in Paradise Lost
    • Representations of Hell
      • Hell in Beowulf
      • Paradise Lost’s Liquid Hell
    • Medieval Mysticism: A Space For Women’s Authority
      • Julian of Norwich
      • Margery Kempe
    • God, Literature, and Religious Denomination in a Changing Christendom
      • Mysticism and Miracle in Catholic Europe
      • The Reformation and the “Intellectualization” of God
  • Nature and Culture
    • The Environment from the Middle Ages to Early Modern Period
      • Environment in Paradise Lost
      • Environment in Sir Gawain and Utopia
    • Kissing in Medieval Literature- Brooke Zimmerle
      • Kissing in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
      • Kissing in Margery Kempe
    • Medieval and Early Modern Feasts
      • Feasts in Sir Gawain
      • “Meals in common”: Utopian Dining
    • Ars Moriendi and the Early Modern Period
      • Authors’ Views on Ars Moriendi
      • Ars Moriendi in Everyman
    • Games Medievalists Play
      • Beowulf’s Game: Battle
      • Sir Gawain’s Game: A Courtly Dare
  • Literary Concerns
    • A Brief History of Allegorical Literature
      • Allegory in the Middle Ages
      • 16th vs. 21st Century Allegory
    • Allegory in the Middle Ages and the 18th Century
      • Allegory in Everyman- pg3
      • Allegory Defined
    • Female Readership in the Middle Ages
      • Parenting Through Books
      • Julian of Norwich
    • Heroes of Epic British Literature
      • Beowulf as a Hero
      • Satan as a Hero – Paradise Lost
    • The Role of the Translator
      • Fixers and Their Roles in Translations of Medieval Texts
      • Translations and How They Change the Meaning of Medieval Texts
    • The Self in 15th and 16th Century Dramatic Literature
      • The Self in Everyman
      • The Self in Faustus

Margery Kempe

By: Siena Di Sera

First page of the only known manuscript of Margery Kempe. The full virtual manuscript is provided by The British Library. http://www.bl.uk/manuscripts/Viewer.aspx?ref=add_ms_61823_fs001r

Like Julian of Norwich, Margery Kempe cunningly used the opening created by the lifestyle of anchoresses and religious mystics within the late medieval period to assert her dominance and independence within theology. Through her seeming humility, Margery Kempe establishes her theological visions as prophetic. Her manipulations of gender switch many of the characteristics that priorly were neatly organized into the dichotomy of male and female. She also used Christianity to express spiritual and sexual freedom, bringing her husband into the world of her visions and asserting her lack of consent.

As noted earlier, religious women who wished to become leaders in faith through their visions must craft their work extremely carefully. Due to the prejudices and stereotypes already running rampant throughout medieval society, the way through which their narratives were crafted were vital to their receptions. In keeping with Julian of Norwich, Marjery Kempe exemplifies extreme humility and even self deprecation through referring to herself as “creature” (pg 433). She introduces herself much like Julian of Norwich, stating her age and her disposition. Marjery Kempe, though, begins her narrative with much more self criticism than does Julian of Norwich. She speaks of how the devil has tempted her, and how she must have penance alone to be forgiven. 

How did Kempe view the gender dichotomy?

In terms of Kempe’s manipulation of gender, she does embody many of the values traditionally associated with women. She is extremely emotional, often breaking out into tears within her work. She is a mother and a wife. However, she does not take on the typical submissive role that a wife would have been expected to at the time. She informs her husband that she no longer wishes to have sex, and this assertion of power is both shocking yet also extremely cunning in the way the narrative has been set out. Because Kempe began her story with an explanation of her wish to be pure and do penance, her renouncement of sexual activity with her husband is disguised under the light of religion and purity, and Kempe, a woman, makes a key decision about her body. 

Through this first denial of her husband through chastity, a door is opened to sexual freedom within theology. Kempe describes that she now wears a white dress, a sign of virginity; she has been revirginized in the eyes of the Lord. Whereas Julian of Norwich mixes the gender dichotomy, Kempe flips it. Margery Kempe makes the executive decisions within her marriage and achieves theological prowess within intellectual circles, perhaps introducing proto feminist views on marriage and sexuality which echo the modern ideals of consent and choice for women’s bodies. Her interactions with God himself become marital and even sexual. Kempe has not manipulated the gendered idea of the Lord and Son, but makes independent and self defining moves within her femininity through religious mystic narrative.

  • http://www.luminarium.org/medlit/kempebk.htm
  • https://www.bookofdaystales.com/tag/pilgrimage/

Images:

Jokinen, Anninna. “An Illumination from M.S. Royal 15 D 1.” Luminarium.org, 1996, www.luminarium.org/medlit/kempebk.htm.

“Margery Kempe.” Book of Days Tales, 9 Nov. 2016, www.bookofdaystales.com/tag/pilgrimage/.

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