Words of Love
Passionate Women from Heloise to Sylvia Plath
Pamela Norris(Author)
HarperCollins (Publisher)
Published on 19. June 2006
Book
Hardback
512 pages
978-0-00-257178-4 (ISBN)
Description
This is a rich, diverse social and cultural history of the development of romantic love in the West. From the earliest recorded history to the present, women have bucked convention, subverted stereotypes and willingly risked their reputations, their livelihoods - sometimes even their lives - for love. Throughout this often tumultuous history, they have also recorded their experiences of romance, passion and sex in voices distinctively their own, at once erudite and erotic, which vividly capture the pleasurable as well as the painful aspects of being a woman in love. How did it feel, for example, to be a Japanese court lady, playing a delicate and dangerous game of political maneuvering and illicit, moonlit assignations? Or to be the object of courtly love, raised to an impossible ideal only to be abandoned, in many cases, by troubadours more interested in vaunting their own skill and flattering their masters than in the supposed inspiration for their songs? Across nations and eras, women of all ages and walks of life have written of their feelings, passions and regrets in terms ranging from the ardently intimate to the desperately embittered.
This rich, diverse and innovative exploration of women's interpretations of love - ranging from medieval poets to Victorian novelists, through Daphne de Maurier to Sylvia Plath - sheds light not only on the ways in which women over the centuries have responded to conventions of romance, gender and status, but also on the societies in which they moved and the times in which they lived. Writing with emotional sympathy, scholarly vigor and intellectual insight, Pamela Norris breathes life and passion back into the women who have thronged the centuries since Heloise, and illuminates cultures at once distant and - in the profoundly personal passions of the women who recorded them - immediately and movingly familiar.
This rich, diverse and innovative exploration of women's interpretations of love - ranging from medieval poets to Victorian novelists, through Daphne de Maurier to Sylvia Plath - sheds light not only on the ways in which women over the centuries have responded to conventions of romance, gender and status, but also on the societies in which they moved and the times in which they lived. Writing with emotional sympathy, scholarly vigor and intellectual insight, Pamela Norris breathes life and passion back into the women who have thronged the centuries since Heloise, and illuminates cultures at once distant and - in the profoundly personal passions of the women who recorded them - immediately and movingly familiar.
Reviews / Votes
Praise for 'The Story of Eve': 'The ground this book covers is extraordinary: it is both scholarly and readable.' Fay Weldon, Books Gazette 'This fascinating book is full of provocative argument, retrospective indignation, and meticulous scholarship.' Jessica Mann, Literary ReviewMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
HarperCollins Publishers
Illustrations
24 col plates
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 159 mm
Weight
870 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-00-257178-4 (9780002571784)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Pamela Norris read English at Bristol University and has an MA in Renaissance Studies. She taught English at the University of Zagreb in Yugoslavia and in Paris, and then worked in publishing. Her publications include a collection of Victorian women's poetry, and critical editions of Thomas Hardy and Jane Austen. Her masterful 'The Story of Eve' was published by Picador in 1998.