TY - BOOK AU - Powell,Morgan ED - Project Muse, ED - Project Muse. TI - Gender, Reading, and Truth in the Twelfth Century : : The Woman in the Mirror / T2 - Medieval media and culture SN - 9781641893787 AV - Z1003.5.E9 P684 2020 PY - 2020/// CY - Baltimore, Maryland PB - Project Muse KW - Literature, Medieval KW - Appreciation KW - German literature KW - Middle High German, 1050-1500 KW - History and criticism KW - French literature KW - To 1500 KW - Women and literature KW - History KW - Women KW - Religious life KW - Europe KW - Middle Ages, 500-1500 KW - Books and reading KW - Electronic books. KW - local N1 - Issued as part of book collections on Project MUSE; Includes bibliographical references (pages [385]-410) and index; Mutations of the reading woman -- Reading as Mary did -- Constructing the woman's mirror -- Seeking the reader/ viewer of the St. Albans Psalter -- Quae est ista, quae ascendit? (Canticles 3:6) : rethinking the woman reader in Early Old French literature -- Ego dilecto meo et dilectus meus mihi (Canticles 6:2) : Mary's reading and the Epiphany of Empathy -- A new poetics for Âventiure : the exposition of Wolfram von Eschenbach's Parzival -- The heart, the wound, and the word--sacred and profane; Open Access N2 - The twelfth century witnessed the birth of modern Western European literary tradition: major narrative works appeared in both French and in German, founding a literary culture independent of the Latin tradition of the Church and Roman Antiquity. But what gave rise to the sudden interest in and legitimization of literature in these "vulgar tongues"? Until now, the answer has centred on the somewhat nebulous role of new female vernacular readers. Powell argues that a different appraisal of the same evidence offers a window onto something more momentous: not "women readers" but instead a reading act conceived of as female lies behind the polysemic identification of women as the audience of new media in the twelfth century. This woman is at the centre of a re-conception of Christian knowing, a veritable revolution in the mediation of knowledge and truth. By following this figure through detailed readings of key early works, Powell unveils a surprise, a new poetics of the body meant to embrace the capacities of new audiences and viewers of medieval literature and visual art UR - https://muse.jhu.edu/book/75863/ ER -