[HN Gopher] Save the Scribe: the women who worked with medieval ...
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Save the Scribe: the women who worked with medieval manuscripts
Author : drdee
Score : 13 points
Date : 2021-10-14 19:58 UTC (1 days ago)
(HTM) web link (www.laphamsquarterly.org)
(TXT) w3m dump (www.laphamsquarterly.org)
| ggm wrote:
| Adult literacy in general across deep time fascinates me. It has
| all kinds of implications for leasure vs work life balance, the
| nature of society, social status. We've allowed an image of life
| to perpetuate which implicitly alienates 50% of the world's
| productive labour to a secondary role except for a 9-18 month
| window of child birth and breastfeeding, ignoring all the other
| lifetime when economically (I know this is dehumanising) this
| makes absolutely no sense.
|
| Hunter-gatherers notoriously actually live off women's gathering
| labour, the hunt part is supplementary protein, and entertainment
| for idle jackasses: women do most of the work. Why do we allow
| reading of history to tell us scribes, and implicitly literate
| people were "mostly men" when evidence is at best one sided?
| Collectively, religious women may well have outnumbered monks.
| Men had to do other things, including dying in pointless activity
| far more than women. Marian reverence implies a religious status
| of women which demands economic relevance as well.
| wizard-beta wrote:
| Relevant, from deep in the footnotes of a 1820 edition of Nennius
| I found in a used bookstore
|
| >Not only men, but women were thus occupied, to whose
| insufficiency the defects of many manuscripts are assignable. (P.
| Sarti de Profess. Bonon.) This authority refers to the female
| scribes of Bologna. We may, however, believe the practice to have
| been general; for Engelhardus (anno 1200) reports an accident
| which happened to a nun in the exercise of her employment: "Cum
| soror una _cui usus erat scribendi membranam_ , dum ad lineas
| punctaret subulam incaute trahens, oculum transfigit." Defective
| transcript is, however, not solely to be attributed to females;
| for the accurate and elegant Petrarch indignantly exclaims, "Who
| shall prescribe an effectual remedy for the ignorance and
| worthlessness of copiers, who spoil and confuse the performances
| they undertake?---At this time, every one who can _redden
| letters_ or guide a pen, though void of learning, skill, or
| ability, assumes the character of a scribe. I should not censure
| their _defects in orthography (for that is a long forgotten
| art,)_ if they would faithfully transcribe what is before them.
| They might betray their insufficiency, but we should have in the
| copy the substance of the original. They now confound both
| together, and, by substituting one thing for another, we can
| scarce identify the author from which they transcribed. If
| Cicero, Livy, and many other illustrious writers, could return to
| life, and re-peruse their own compositions, _would they
| understand them, and doubting the whole, would they believe them
| to be their own, or rather, those of some barbarous people?_ "
| fijiaarone wrote:
| There was apparently a letter written by a nun, so it only stands
| to reason that women were medieval scribes writing manuscripts.
| jterrys wrote:
| Well, there was at least one.
|
| The article is an excerpt from the book, written by the author
| of the article.
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