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Hardcover The Book of the City of Ladies Book

ISBN: 0892550619

ISBN13: 9780892550616

The Book of the City of Ladies

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Book Overview

Christine de Pizan was born in 1365 in Venice. Her family moved to Paris three years later when her father was appointed court astrologer to King Charles V. Close ties to the royal court and her father's encouragement enabled Christine to obtain a good education, unusual for women of her time. At the age of fifteen, she married a court notary, who also fostered her learning and her literary activities. She was only twenty-five when she was widowed...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Excellent introduction to women's chivalry!

Medieval French writer Christine de Pizan and her work deserve to be better known. THis book is a translation of one of her great works, and shows clearly medieval women were far from being the simpering ninnies or oppressed victims all too many people seem to think they were. With an excellent introduction, written by a scholar, this is a very good addition to any library on the Middle Ages.

"Une généalogie au féminin"

LA CITE DES DAMES was one of the first medieval books I have read (but I am by no means an expert in the area... yet!), and I recommend it to not only those interested in this period, but also for those interested in what we would call "women's studies," historiography, or similar endeavors. It is filled with many interesting stories from ancient times to Christine's own time, which also makes the book a pretty entertaining (and sometimes even humorous) account of the historic figures it discusses. Christine herself was an amazing person, so if you buy it, be sure not to skip the introduction - especially if you are unfamiliar with medieval writings: Some of the ideas presented (and how they are presented) are much different than how we would think in modern times, so it is important to familiarize yourself with things like massive over-proving (which may end up being tedious to the unsuspecting reader), Christine's view on marriage, and literary conventions that would perhaps seem very silly to us now, but worked well 600 years ago. Basically, when reading this book, if you keep in mind the context in which it was written, you should be able to appreciate it and like it just as I have.(by the way -- the book I read was not the Penguin edition, but rather the 1998 English translation by Earl Richards, ISBN 0892552301, so unless you're planning on extensive criticism, you should be okay with this version).

Witty and revealing look at a period primary source

Christine falls asleep while contemplating why women in her society get such a bad rap, and has a long dream about exemplary women and their characteristics.Did you ever wonder why we just accept that women in the Middle Ages were considered demons in disguise? Christine tells us all about what she thinks of that concept and of those who insist on spreading such maliciousness, all in an engaging story full of examples of brave, courageous, intelligent, pious, beautiful, generous women. The book was written to dispel some of the nastier slanders then current about women, but it's still good reading today. I confess that during the part about martyrs I wandered off a bit (it is some gruesome stuff in places), but as a period source, it's definitely one every history maven ought to have. Christine is intelligent, observant, and witty; her writing fairly sparkles with indignation over the treatment of women and her sardonic amusement at those men spreading those lies. While hyper-Catholic and in places highly allegorical (and in many places its version of "history" is highly questionable, of course), it is an essential look at a time period where women didn't often make their views known in written form.This book is distinct from "The Book of the Treasure of the City of Ladies".

Great book and great fun

This is the third time I write a review for this book. The previous reviews never made it. Here I go again:From an age when women were expected to play a silent and obedient supporting role, Christine de Pizan demonstrates that intelligence and grace are very useful allies. One of the first women that we know of to write professionally in order to make a living, Christine's life was a mixture of privilege and loss. Her "Book of the City of Ladies" is definitely our net gain, though, since we can appreciate the beauty of well-applied talent. The author set out to write a history of women from the female perspective, giving us a different view of many famous (plenty of them mythical) women who have served as scapegoats for damaging stereotypes that perpetuated misogyny in traditional history, literature, and philosophy. Thus, Pizan deals with Queen Dido in a manner different to that adopted by Virgil, and Lavinia --who does not say a word in "The Aeneid"-- rules as a queen according to this "Book of the City of Ladies." Medea receives some help from Pizan's editing (there is no mention of the princess of Colchis killing her children to punish Jason), Circe gets in just 14 lines far better press than with Homer, and even female characters from Boccaccio's "Decameron," like Ghismonda and Lisabetta, are described from subtly better angles, particularly Lisabetta, who proves to be an intelligent woman who uses deduction to find out what had happened to her lover, and doesn't need a ghost to tell her, as in the "Decameron."Pizan's book is a pleasure to read. I recommend a certain background in some of the works she based her own text ("Odyssey" by Homer, "Aeneid" by Virgil, "Metamorphoses" by Ovid, some of the classical Greek tragedies by Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides, the "Decameron" by Boccaccio, etc.), in order to better understand the author's point in writing such a book. I was fortunate anough to have gone through a Fall 2000 quarter when I had to read these works, plus others. For the more casual, although discriminating reader, Christine de Pizan should be a new, welcome light over known subjects. It is interesting to note that her book had not been translated into English since 1521, a neglect of 461 years until this 1982 version by Earl Jeffrey Richards. This neglect speaks eloquently about the attitudes sorrounding a woman's attempt at writing her version of history. Read Christine. She will not disappoint you.

Christine de Pizan Le tresor des dames-The treasure of women

In Christine de Pizan's The Book of the City of Ladies there is a very passsion in the style that she wrote in. Although for some it may not be the clearist book to read Christine shows herself and her writing to not olny to be magnificent but it shows that in an era where most women were in the shadow of men she became one of the most learned ladies of her time and even now in the year 2000 her works are sill being published. This book is for the people who enjoy midevil/rennasance writing or just want to see the views of the world from a wonderfully bright woman who in this book remarks about the other learned women of her time. Don't think this book to be out dated though, even now 600 hundred years later her work is far from being un-understandable and boaring. I also highly suggest looking into The Selected Writings of Christine de Pizan or even a biography about her amazing life.
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