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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

Medieval Mysticism: A Space For Women’s Authority

By: Siena Di Sera

  • “‘Christ as Mother.’” St. Chisostom’s Church News and Views, 15 Mar. 2016, stchrysostoms.wordpress.com/2015/03/15/christ-as-mother/.

    Depiction of Christ lactating/oozing blood into a chalice

The swift entry of Christianity onto the medieval stage created shocking changes which made society question the very values of right and wrong. Medieval writers made many attempts to weave Christ into the epics of battle and revenge, but over time Christianity took on a new and unchecked power over societal views of divinity, individuality, and eternity. During the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, the emergence of female Christian mystics and religious anchoresses gave way to contrarian views of the conventional ideas of gender at the time and forged a new (yet imperfect) safe haven for women to write, think, and be heard. Due to the difficulty of women obtaining education, social privilege and religious prominence within Christianity offered a female key to the spiritual language used primarily by men during these centuries. The nature of the Catholic religion itself and its own defiances of gender expectations paved the way early on for women’s authority gained by mystic visions. 

Gender norms within the Middle Ages

Gender during the medieval period had strict divisions according to sex. For example, in the article “Sexuality, Gender, and the Body in Late Medieval Women’s Spirituality: Cases from Germany and the Netherlands”, Ulrike Wiethaus explains that men were denoted as individuals of “power, judgement, discipline, and reason” and women were associated with the characteristics of “weakness, mercy, lust, and unreason” (Wiethaus 1). Because men had fewer orifices and were generally physically stronger, they were seen as the more dependable, strong, and intellectual out of the two genders.  Furthermore, women were associated with physicality and the material world whereas men were seen as closer to the divine.

Mysticism in a broad sense is an alteration of consciousness often paired with a certain ideology or religion. 

 Though Catholicism may seem outwardly to be an institution which further enforces  social tensions and discriminations within gender and race, it was actually the Catholic dogma of Jesus as mother and the metaphor of “human relationships (friendship, fatherhood or motherhood, or erotic love)” which created a rift in conventional thought on divinity, gender, and authority (Bynum 258). Women had very few educational opportunities at the time and were excluded from scriptural interpretation and preaching; therefore mysticism became the only avenue for women during this period to gain authority by means of prophecy and visionary work. Medieval women used the mystic ideal of pairing subjective “revelations” with institutional power and dogma to become authoritative sources of Christian interpretation.  Looking forward to the early modern stress on individuality, mystic women used the stereotype of “physicality” to access the male value of “divinity” through Christ. In the Bible and in Catholic teaching, Christ’s physical presence and suffering on Earth as well as his feminine attributes of caregiving and affective emotion brought the divine into the realm of the material and the physical, realms in which mystic women established power. 

But how did mystic women gain spiritual authority when their texts are so overtly personally inspired, grandiose, and even sexual? Women who entered the Church as an anchoress were shut away in a service similar to a burial, vowing to spend the rest of their lives in service to God and asceticism.  In Amy Hollywood’s article “‘Who Does She Think She Is’: Christian Women’s Mysticism”, she argues that it is humility that grants these women authority: even through their extreme claims. Simone de Beauvoir later writes that this humility merely served to disguise narcissism in their visionary work. This facade of humility is almost inseparable from the role of anchoress that was taken on by both Julian of Norwich and Margery Kempe, the latter even referring to herself in her work as “creature”. 

Subversion of gender norms

Another way through which these women gained notoriety and power was through their manipulation of gender norms, the female body, and views of the Trinity. The value of physicality traditionally negatively associated with these women actually became a tool; the physical suffering of their bodies through fasting and isolation allowed them to become intermediaries to God. The interpretation of Jesus as a physical sufferer, weak and bloody, confuses gender norms: weakness and “leakiness” were traditionally associated with women, and in this case it can be seen that the deity himself is embodying these qualities. Jesus as mother who lactates and a human who suffered on Earth put into question the negative connotations with these activities in relation to women. This physicality of Jesus Christ meant women could actually wield their materiality and emotional affect to achieve divinity and transcendence, reserved priorly for men. Moreover, sexual relationship with God promotes the freedom of women to be both holy and sexually active at the same time. In The Book of Marjery Kempe, the author wears white and proclaims herself “revirginized” before entering into a marital union with God. 

The entry of women into the arena of “high spiritual language” is indubitably due to the popularization of Christianity. Women who entered religious lives as mystics gained education, audience, and authority that had been previously unavailable. Christian bending of gender norms through depictions of Jesus as a mother and human sufferer as well as the tactful manipulation of these openings by mystic medieval Christian women added new voices to the literary canon. These female voices offered fresh and varying interpretations of gender: some writers flipped the dichotomy by embodying traditionally male values while others chose to abolish the dichotomy completely. The visions that generated the spiritual authority these women enjoyed represented a form of liberation from long spanning archaic dismissal of femininity in literature and in faith. 

Bibliography

Beonio-Brocchieri, Mariateresa Fumagalli. “The Feminine Mind in Medieval Mysticism.” Creative Women in Medieval and Early Modern Italy: A Religious and Artistic Renaissance, edited by E. Ann Matter and John Coakley, University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 1994, pp. 19–33. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv513627.6.

Bynum, Caroline Walker. “Jesus As Mother And Abbot As Mother.” Medieval Religion, 1977, pp. 20–48., doi:10.4324/9780203328675_chapter_1.

Greenblatt, Stephen, et al. The Norton Anthology of English Literature. A, W.W. Norton, 2018.

Hollywood, Amy. “‘Who Does She Think She Is?’” Theology Today, vol. 60, no. 1, 2003, pp. 5–15., doi:10.1177/004057360306000102.

Thompson, Jennifer. “‘In No Sense a Vision:” Re-Evaluating Affective Piety, Gender, and the Maternal Figuration of Christ in Julian of Norwich’s Revelations of Divine Love.’” Questia, 2005, “In No Sense a Vision:” Re-Evaluating Affective Piety, Gender, and the Maternal Figuration of Christ in Julian of Norwich’s Revelations of Divine Love.

Wiethaus, Ulrike. “Sexuality, Gender, and the Body in Late Medieval Women’s Spirituality: Cases from Germany and the Netherlands.” Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion, vol. 7, no. 1, 1991, pp. 35–52. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/25002144.

Julian of Norwich
Margery Kempe

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