1st Edition

Sanctity and Female Authorship Birgitta of Sweden & Catherine of Siena

Edited By Maria H. Oen, Unn Falkeid Copyright 2020
    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    Birgitta of Sweden (Birgitta Birgersdotter, 1302/03-1373) and her younger contemporary Catherine of Siena (Caterina Benincasa, 1347-1380) form the most powerful and influential female duo in European history. Both enjoyed saintly reputations in life, while acting as the charismatic leaders of a considerable group of followers consisting of clergy as well as mighty secular men and women. They are also among the very few women of the Trecento to leave a substantial body of written work which was widely disseminated in their original languages and in translations. Copies of Birgitta’s Liber celestis revelacionum (The Heavenly Book of Revelations) and compilations of Catherine's letters (Le lettere), prayers Le orazioni) and her theological work, Il Dialogo della divina Provvidenza (The Dialogue) found their way into monastic, royal, and humanist libraries all over Europe. After their deaths, Birgitta’s and Catherine’s respective groups of supporters sought to have them formally canonized. In both cases, however, their political and theological outspokenness, orally and in text, and their public authority represented obstacles. 

    In this comparative study, leading scholars from different disciplinary backgrounds offer, for the very first time, a comprehensive exploration of the lives and activities of Birgitta and Catherine in tandem. Particular attention is given to their literary works and the complex process of negotiating their sanctity and authorial roles. Above all, what the chapters reveal is the many points of connections between two of the most influential women of the Trecento, and how they were related to one another by their peers and successors. 

    1) F. Thomas Luongo: "Birgitta and Catherine and their Textual Communities"





    2) Jane Tylus: "‘Su dunque, peregrine!’: Pilgrimage and Female Spirituality in the Writings of Birgitta and Catherine"





    3) Unn Falkeid:"Constructing Female Authority: Birgitta of Sweden, Catherine of Siena, and the two Marys"





    4) Renate Blumenfeld-Kosinski: "Saint Birgitta’s and Saint Catherine’s Visions of Crusading"





    5) Silvia Nocentini: "The Transmission of Birgittine and Catherinian Works within the Mystical Tradition: Exchanges, Cross-readings, Connections"





    6) Maria H. Oen: "Ambivalent Images of Authorship"





    7) Roger Andersson: "Saints Catherine and Birgitta as Received by Preachers"





    8) Gábor Klaniczay: "The Mystical Pregnancy of Birgitta and the Invisible Stigmata of Catherine: Bodily Signs of Supernatural Communication in the Lives of the Two Mystics"





    9) Camille Rouxpetel: "The Crossing Paths of Birgitta of Sweden, Catherine of Siena, and Alfonso of Jaén"





    Epilogue by André Vauchez

    Biography

    Maria H. Oen is Associate Professor of Art History and Deputy Director of the Swedish Institute of Classical Studies in Rome. She is also the editor of A Companion to Birgitta of Sweden and Her Legacy in the Later Middle Ages (Brill, 2019).





    Unn Falkeid is Professor of the History of Ideas at the University of Oslo. She is the author of The Avignon Papacy Contested: An Intellectual History from Dante to Catherine of Siena (Harvard University Press, 2017), and co-editor, with Albert Russel Ascoli, of The Cambridge Companion to Petrarch (Cambridge University Press, 2015), and with Aileen A. Feng, of Rethinking Gaspara Stampa in the Canon of Renaissance Poetry (Ashgate, 2015).