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Silence: A Thirteenth-century French Romance

Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Michigan State University Press
ISBN: 0870135430
ISBN-13: 9780870135439
Released: 31 Dec 1992
RRP: £17.50
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Customer Reviews

The Orlando of the 13th century - By: Mia Jankowicz, 20 Jun 2003
This was a hugely satisfying find & even if I hadn't been a student of gender studies I'd have found this a cracking read. As the preface says, you could equallly be a student of Old French, women's studies, mediaeval literature, or just in need of a reallly good story in order to properly enjoy this book.

Silence is born a girl to an ambitious gentrified couple who, knowing that a female can't inherit, decide to raise her as a boy. He is packed off to a secluded part of the country & grows to be a superlatively handsome, polite, talented young man. In doing this, Nature is furious, having expended masses of beauty on this youth only to have it wasted on hearty activity & bronzed skin. Nurture, however, is not to be undone & is determined to demonstrate her power over Nature.

The use of these linguistic metaphors, as well as that of Eufemie (Euphemism) make a remarkably modern point about the marginalised position of women in language. These personifications are just some of the amusing features of this story. Throughout his adventures, Silence battles with his gendered conscience, becomes a minstrel, is plotted against by the Queen, becomes a knight, a battle hero, & eventuallly faces Merlin.

Heldris of Cornwalll, despite using plots that would not be unfamiliar to any 1970s essentialist feminist, is no lover of women & meanders onto alll kinds of moralising trajectories in the course of the story (this is, as one easily forgets, a mediaeval text, after alll). However this tendency manages not to detract from either the wonderfully precocious gender-bending possibilities, nor the sheer fun of the story. Please don't relegate this to the margins of women's studies departments, it's great fun, & deserves far more attention.