Description

Book Synopsis
How were the libraries of aristocratic women in the late French-speaking Middle Ages developed? Which reading trends and topics were embraced by female readers of the fifteenth century? What substantial gaps in evidence and data loss impede our knowledge of medieval women’s libraries? Combining literary, historical, and cultural studies, Women’s Libraries in Late Medieval Bourbonnais, Burgundy, and France: A Family Affair addresses these questions in its examination of the wide cultural, literary, and familial webs influencing fifteenth-century high- and mid-level female aristocrats’ acquisition of books. It explores the roles of gifting and borrowing and reading trends in the formation of several generations of women’s libraries to demonstrate the integrally connected nature of literary culture at the various French-speaking courts. The book’s analysis clarifies the powerful role that women played in the formation of important intellectual edifices in French-speaking regions, demonstrating the impact of women on female and male literary culture.

Trade Review

‘Kaplan’s case studies shine a detailed spotlight on female book owners and their interactions with books… [and] allows us to rethink and understand part of the nobility and their cultural practices.’

Translated from German: ‘Kaplans Fallstudien die weiblichen Buchbesitzerinnen und ihren Umgang mit Büchern detailliert ins Rampenlicht rücken… [und] der es uns erlaubt, einen Teil des Adels und seine kulturellen Praktiken neu zu überdenken und zu begreifen.’ Vanina Kopp, Francia Recensio

Women’s Libraries in Late Medieval Bourbonnais,

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    A Hardback by S. C. Kaplan

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      View other formats and editions of Women’s Libraries in Late Medieval Bourbonnais, by S. C. Kaplan

      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 01/01/2023
      ISBN13: 9781800856325, 978-1800856325
      ISBN10: 1800856326

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      How were the libraries of aristocratic women in the late French-speaking Middle Ages developed? Which reading trends and topics were embraced by female readers of the fifteenth century? What substantial gaps in evidence and data loss impede our knowledge of medieval women’s libraries? Combining literary, historical, and cultural studies, Women’s Libraries in Late Medieval Bourbonnais, Burgundy, and France: A Family Affair addresses these questions in its examination of the wide cultural, literary, and familial webs influencing fifteenth-century high- and mid-level female aristocrats’ acquisition of books. It explores the roles of gifting and borrowing and reading trends in the formation of several generations of women’s libraries to demonstrate the integrally connected nature of literary culture at the various French-speaking courts. The book’s analysis clarifies the powerful role that women played in the formation of important intellectual edifices in French-speaking regions, demonstrating the impact of women on female and male literary culture.

      Trade Review

      ‘Kaplan’s case studies shine a detailed spotlight on female book owners and their interactions with books… [and] allows us to rethink and understand part of the nobility and their cultural practices.’

      Translated from German: ‘Kaplans Fallstudien die weiblichen Buchbesitzerinnen und ihren Umgang mit Büchern detailliert ins Rampenlicht rücken… [und] der es uns erlaubt, einen Teil des Adels und seine kulturellen Praktiken neu zu überdenken und zu begreifen.’ Vanina Kopp, Francia Recensio

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