Peter Linehan (1943–2020)
Auteur de The Medieval World
Œuvres de Peter Linehan
Cross, Crescent and Conversion: Studies on Medieval Spain and Christendom in Memory of Richard Fletcher (The Medieval… (2007) — Directeur de publication — 13 exemplaires
The Spanish Church and the Papacy in the Thirteenth Century (Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Third… (1971) 5 exemplaires
The Processes of Politics and the Rule of Law: Studies on the Iberian Kingdoms and Papal Rome in the Middle Ages… (2002) 2 exemplaires
Historical Memory and Clerical Activity in Medieval Spain and Portugal (Variorum Collected Studies Series) (2012) 2 exemplaires
Las dueñas de Zamora : secretos, estupro y poderes en la iglesia española del siglo XIII 1 exemplaire
Oeuvres associées
The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 4, c.1024-c.1198, Part 1 (1752) — Contributeur — 80 exemplaires
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Nom légal
- Linehan, Peter Anthony
- Date de naissance
- 1943-07-11
- Date de décès
- 2020-07-09
- Sexe
- male
- Nationalité
- UK
- Lieu de naissance
- Mortlake, London, Uk
- Cause du décès
- heart disease
- Études
- St, Benedict’s School, Ealing
Cambridge University (St. John’s College) - Professions
- historian of Spain
Fellow of St. John’s College, Cambridge
Membres
Critiques
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Auteurs associés
Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 14
- Aussi par
- 3
- Membres
- 157
- Popularité
- #133,743
- Évaluation
- 3.6
- Critiques
- 2
- ISBN
- 44
- Langues
- 3
Neither Peter Linehan's bibliography nor his understanding of the sisters of Zamora shows much engagement with the burgeoning body of work on women religious which was in existence by the late 90s when this work was published. I don't think he engages with a female historian's work except to snipe at it (feminist history, by the way, is "ideological colonisation, indeed, of the as yet uncharted past" which is "historiographical modishness [...] the ladies themselves being sacrificed to the pitiless imperatives of the dialectic") Yet while Linehan insists over and over that his is strictly a just-the-facts-ma'am account, he consistently treats his male and female subjects differently, and holds them to different evidential standards—hardly the model of impartial reason he clearly prides himself on being.
This is apparent throughout. While the cathedral canons of the city devote themselves to "extending and rationalising" their estates, the sisters' stewardship of their estates shows them to be caught up by "the spirit of limited-term investment rather than permanent commitment" to the religious life. Based on the evidence of an (abbreviated! scribally created! non-vernacular!) deposition transcript, Linehan concludes that the sisters were sex-crazed "harridans", "thin-lipped", "sullen", "a community of possibly vindictive women", and compares these grown women to immature female undergrads. (Wow, it must have been fun to be a woman and one of his students.)
The sisters of Zamora are, in Linehan's account, not truly agential or integrated parts of the political and religious lives of their city—but they sure are shrews! Hence, I presume, why he uses a misogynist quotation from Byron as a chapter epigraph, and an even worse one from Ovid (Casta est quam nemo rogavit) as a pithy, "haha ladies amirite?" summation of some kind of eternal truth about women.
Add in a soupçon of xenophobia (living in the south of Spain would offer northern European settlers only "endless olive oil and the prospect of stomach cramps in perpetuity"), disjointed organisation, and some truly tortured syntax, and this makes for a truly horrendous book. Avoid.… (plus d'informations)