Description
This dissertation focuses on the connections between childbirth and spirituality in fourteenth- and early fifteenth-century England. It argues that scholastic interest in conception and procreation led to a proliferation of texts mentioning obstetrics and gynecology, and that this attention to women's medicine and birth spread from the universities to the laity. This dissertation contends that there is interdependence between spiritual and physical health in late medieval English religious culture, correlated with and perhaps caused by an increasing fascination with materialism and women's bodies in religious practices and rhetoric. The first chapter provides an analysis of birth in medical and pastoral texts. Pastoral works were heavily influenced by the ecclesiastical emphasis on baptism, as well as by scholastic medicine's simultaneous disdain for and reluctant integration of folk medicine. The second chapter examines birth descriptions in narratives of saints' miracles and collections of exempla; these representations of childbirth were used in religious rhetoric to teach, motivate, and dissuade audiences. The third chapter turns to the cycle play representations of the nativity as depicting the mysteries of human generation and divine incarnation for public consumption. The fourth chapter analyzes the abstract uses of childbirth in visionary and other religious texts, especially in descriptions of spiritual rebirth and the development of vice and virtue in individuals or institutions. By identifying their roles as analogous with the roles of midwives, visionaries authorized themselves as spiritual caretakers, vital for communal health and necessary for collective spiritual growth. These chapters outline a trajectory of increasing male access to the birthing chamber through textual descriptions and prescriptions about birth and midwifery. At the same time, religious texts acknowledged, sought to regulate, and sometimes even utilized the potential authority of mothers and midwives as physical and spiritual caretakers.
Download count: 18
Details
Title
- Childbirth and midwifery in the religious rhetoric of England, 1300-1450
Contributors
- Swann, Alaya (Author)
- Voaden, Rosalynn (Thesis advisor)
- Newhauser, Richard (Committee member)
- Sturges, Robert (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2014
Subjects
- Literature, Medieval
- Women's Studies
- Medieval History
- history of childbirth
- Drama, Medieval
- medieval England
- medieval midwifery
- medieval mystics
- medieval women's medicine
- Medicine, Medieval, in literature
- Midwifery in literature
- Midwifery--England--History--14th century.
- Midwifery
- Midwifery--England--History--15th century.
- Midwifery
- Medicine--Religious aspects--History.
- medicine
Resource Type
Collections this item is in
Note
-
thesisPartial requirement for: Ph. D., Arizona State University, 2014
-
bibliographyIncludes bibliographical references (p. 230-250)
-
Field of study: English
Citation and reuse
Statement of Responsibility
by Alaya Swann