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Bonoure and Buxum

A Study of Wives in Late Medieval English Literature

by Sue Niebrzydowski (Author)
©2006 Monographs 240 Pages

Summary

If married in church, medieval women vowed before God and their husbands to be ‘bonoure and buxum’, that is, meek and obedient in bed and at table. This book is a study of wives in a variety of fourteenth- and fifteenth-century romance, fabliaux, cycle drama, life-writing, lyrics and hagiography. The volume examines key moments that defined life as a married woman: her eligibility to become a wife, the wedding ceremony, her conjugal rights and duties, childbirth and her contribution to the family economy. The book explores the way in which the literary representation of wives is in dialogue with discourses that strove to construct and regulate the role of ‘wife’; canon and secular law, marriage liturgy, medical treatises on the female body, sermons, manuals of spiritual instruction, biblical paradigms, conduct books and misogamous writings. Moreover, the volume examines the possibilities for subversion of these paradigms by listening to literary wives speak both within and against these discourses. Real women’s attitudes, and strategies of subversion, are woven into the volume throughout, as recorded in church and manorial court records, in their wills and in their writing.

Details

Pages
240
Year
2006
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039107278
Language
English
Keywords
Mittelenglisch Frau (Motiv) Housewife Contract Conjugal Right Shrew Literatur Ceremony Geschichte 1300-1500
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2006. 240 pp.

Biographical notes

Sue Niebrzydowski (Author)

The Author: Sue Niebrzydowski is a lecturer in English at the University of Warwick. Her publications include articles on Chaucerian women, medieval theatre and the translation of the Latin texts of the St Albans Psalter.

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Title: Bonoure and Buxum