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Women Men And Spiritual Power Female Saints And Their Male Collaborators Gender Theory And Religion John Coakley

  • SKU: BELL-2121010
Women Men And Spiritual Power Female Saints And Their Male Collaborators Gender Theory And Religion John Coakley
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Women Men And Spiritual Power Female Saints And Their Male Collaborators Gender Theory And Religion John Coakley instant download after payment.

Publisher: Columbia University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 10.39 MB
Pages: 368
Author: John Coakley
ISBN: 0231134002
Language: English
Year: 2005

Product desciption

Women Men And Spiritual Power Female Saints And Their Male Collaborators Gender Theory And Religion John Coakley by John Coakley 0231134002 instant download after payment.

In Women, Men, and Spiritual Power, John Coakley explores male-authored narratives of the lives of Catherine of Siena, Hildegard of Bingen, Angela of Foligno, and six other female prophets or mystics of the late Middle Ages. His readings reveal the complex personal and literary relationships between these women and the clerics who wrote about them. Coakley's work also undermines simplistic characterizations of male control over women, offering an important contribution to medieval religious history.Coakley shows that these male-female relationships were marked by a fundamental tension between power and fascination: the priests and monks were supposed to hold authority over the women entrusted to their care, but they often switched roles, as the men became captivated with the women's spiritual gifts. In narratives of such women, the male authors reflect directly on the relationship between the women's powers and their own. Coakley argues that they viewed these relationships as gendered partnerships that brought together female mystical power and male ecclesiastical authority without placing one above the other. Women, Men, and Spiritual Power chronicles a wide-ranging experiment in the balance of formal and informal powers, in which it was assumed to be thoroughly imaginable for both sorts of authority, in their distinctly gendered terms, to coexist and build on each other. The men's writings reflect an extended moment in western Christianity when clerics had enough confidence in their authority to actually question its limits. After about 1400, however, clerics underwent a crisis of confidence, and such a questioning of institutional power was no longer considered safe. Instead of seeing women as partners, their revelatory powers began to be viewed as evidence of witchcraft. (Vol. 77, Issue 4 Dec. 2008)

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