Transgender mutation and the canon: Christine de Pizan's Livre de la Mutacion de Fortune
In: Postmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural studies, Band 11, Heft 4, S. 451-458
ISSN: 2040-5979
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In: Postmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural studies, Band 11, Heft 4, S. 451-458
ISSN: 2040-5979
In: Medieval feminist forum: MFF ; journal of the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship, Band 55, Heft 1, S. 174-206
ISSN: 2151-6073
This article proposes the use of transgender theory within medieval studies as both a productive and a politically significant optic. The article employs transgender theory to effect a new reading of the miraculous transformation of the character of Blanchandin/e, in the fourteenth-century French chanson de geste, Tristan de Nanteuil, from female to male. First, the often-overlooked importance of Judith Butler's analysis of sex and gender for the understanding of transgender and non-normatively-gendered identities is addressed. Next, using theoretical work by Deleuze, and by Deleuze and Guattari, the article demonstrates how the rhizomatic and folding structures that a transgender reading of Blanchandin/e's transformation brings to light cohere with the series of rhizomes and folds which structure the genealogical logic of the text as a whole. The family tree of Tristan de Nanteuil is shown to answer to queer, rhizomatic, and folding imperatives. In this way, the article demonstrates that the text's transgender genealogy contradicts the anti-generative model of queerness proposed by queer theory's antisocial turn.
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This article proposes the use of transgender theory within medieval studies as both a productive and a politically significant optic. The article employs transgender theory to effect a new reading of the miraculous transformation of the character of Blanchandin/e, in the fourteenth-century French chanson de geste, Tristan de Nanteuil, from female to male. First, the often-overlooked importance of Judith Butler's analysis of sex and gender for the understanding of transgender and non-normatively-gendered identities is addressed. Next, using theoretical work by Deleuze, and by Deleuze and Guattari, the article demonstrates how the rhizomatic and folding structures that a transgender reading of Blanchandin/e's transformation brings to light cohere with the series of rhizomes and folds which structure the genealogical logic of the text as a whole. The family tree of Tristan de Nanteuil is shown to answer to queer, rhizomatic, and folding imperatives. In this way, the article demonstrates that the text's transgender genealogy contradicts the anti-generative model of queerness proposed by queer theory's antisocial turn.
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In: Hagiography Beyond Tradition 2
Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- List of Figures -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Following the Traces. Reassessing the Status Quo, Reinscribing Trans and Genderqueer Realities -- 1 Assigned Female at Death -- 2 Inherited Futures and Queer Privilege -- 3 Juana de la Cruz -- 4 Non-Standard Masculinity and Sainthood in Niketas David's Life of Patriarch Ignatios -- Peripheral Vision(s). Objects, Images, and Identities -- 5 Gender-Querying Christ's Wounds -- 6 Illuminating Queer Gender Identity in the Manuscripts of the Vie de sainte Eufrosine -- 7 The Queerly Departed -- Genre, Gender, and Trans Textualities -- 8 St Eufrosine's Invitation to Gender Transgression -- 9 Holy Queer and Holy Cure -- 10 The Authentic Lives of Transgender Saints -- Epilogue -- Appendix -- Index