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Index
Cover Half Title Title Page Copyright Page Contents List of figures, maps, and tables Notes on Contributors Acknowledgements 1 Approaching women and work in premodern Europe
Uncovering women’s work: Methods and sources Work and its meanings Existing and new paradigms for understanding women’s work Themes: Experiences, relationships, and cultural representation
Experiences Relationships Cultural representation
Where to from here? Notes Select bibliography
2 Working through letters: Women’s voices and epistolary culture in the Tegernseer Liebesbriefe
Letters as evidence of women’s work The Tegernsee manuscript: The context of a letter collection The work of networking: Women and the broader letter collection of Clm 19411 A tradition of intimacy: The literary context of the Tegernseer Liebesbriefe The influence of Ovid and the Heroides: Tegernseer Liebesbriefe 1–8 The influence of Cicero: Liebesbrief 10 and the redefinition of literary and courtly traditions Conclusion Appendices
Appendix 1: Foliation of Clm 19411 Appendix 2: Tegernseer Liebesbriefe overview
Notes Select bibliography
3 Uncourtly cloth workers in the Old French sewing songs
Lienor’s song: Bele Aye More than embroidery Working for others Sewing as women’s professional mestier? Cloth workers as ‘foreigners’ Physical abuse Conclusion Notes Select bibliography
4 ‘When Adam delved and Eve span’: Gender and textile production in the Middle Ages
Historiography and methodology Sources for textile history and problems of interpretation Civic records Visual evidence Literary sources Lexical evidence Material and social influences shaping gender and textile work Economic influences shaping gender and textile work Ideology and iconography Conclusion Notes Select bibliography
5 ‘Fortune ce mestier m’aprist’: Christine de Pizan as writer, teacher, and Voice of Wisdom
On becoming a writer Christine’s vision of the writer’s role The wisdom of Christine Conclusion Notes Select bibliography
6 Home work: The bourgeois wife in later medieval England
Documenting the bourgeois wife Learning to become a bourgeois wife Contributing to the familial economy Household manager Childcare ‘Kinship work’: Forging social networks Chamber work: Sex and intimacy Conclusion Notes Select bibliography
7 Gender, authority, and monastic work: Holy Cross in Brunswick, c. 1500
Holy Cross and the convent diary Gender and governance arrangements at Holy Cross Managing spiritual work Managing temporal affairs Conclusion Notes Select bibliography
8 ‘Any Man or Woman beyng hole & mighty in body’: Women’s work under Tudor vagrancy law
Historiographical trends A lack of women’s work: Mighty men and women Women’s work: Chastisement and charity Conclusion Notes Select bibliography
9 Working at the margins: Women and illicit economic practices in Lyon in the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
Women and the cloth trades in Lyon: An overview Women’s work at the margin of professional guilds Women’s work in the underground economy: The piquage d’once Smuggling inside the city: Women and the calicos trade Conclusion Notes Select bibliography
10 Contested authority: Working women in leading positions in the early modern Dutch urban economy
The legal position of women in Holland Guilds: Defining positions of authority Conflicts in the workshop Authority contested Conflicts in the boards Conclusion Notes Select bibliography
Index
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