Download PDF | Helene Scheck - Reform and Resistance_ Formations of Female Subjectivity in Early Medieval Ecclesiastical Culture - (2008).
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Women in/and Early Ecclesiastical Culture An Overview
This book seeks not to defi ne or locate a true female subject for the early Middle Ages, were that even possible, but to examine subject possibilities as they evolved through the dynamics of ecclesiastical reform and then resistance to reform measures within an extremely complex intermingling of two distinct cultures—Germanic and Mediterranean. More specifi cally, this study focuses intently on the mirroring and rupturing that occur in the formation of female Christian subjects during three of the least stable and most productive moments of reform and resistance in the Germanic early Middle Ages: the early Carolingian reform movement under Charlemagne (ca. 742–814), with particular attention to Alcuin (ca. 735–804); the Alfredian and Benedictine reform movements in AngloSaxon England (in the late ninth through eleventh centuries); and, fi nally, the impressive career of Hrotsvit von Gandersheim, in the midst of the Ottonian renaissance and monastic reforms of tenth-century Saxony. These diverse Germanic cultures during three distinct moments of ecclesiastical development exhibit radically different possibilities for the materialization and dematerialization of culturally intelligible female subjects.
To understand what happened in Germania, we need fi rst to consider how women’s roles changed in early ecclesiastical culture in the Mediterranean regions and how these roles were introduced into Germanic regions. We need to understand the confl icting perceptions of women’s status in the early Church as contextualized in the late antique Mediterranean regions and also to consider the gendering of the imago Dei implicit in early Judeo-Christian perceptions of the relationship between body and soul. We also require some grasp of the position of women in early Germania in order to comprehend better the complex cultural negotiations necessitated by the spread of Christianity to the northern European regions. Specifi cally, we need to look briefl y at some of the larger moments of conversion and reform in Germanic regions up to 1000 CE. Emerging from the Mediterranean regions, the early Church followed patriarchal Greco-Roman and Judaic ideologies, which, with few exceptions, defi ned men alone as fully autonomous beings; women were necessary as helpers and to bear children, especially male children, but they were not considered subjects in their own right.1 Church leaders came together as a political body to discuss, confi rm, or reject certain views or beliefs. Women had no representation in that inner circle, even if they were primary players in the spread of Christianity. Apparent contradictions regarding women’s status in the earliest writings of the Church point to internal contradictions in Christian doctrine. The dominant Christian ideology of the early Church seems not to have acknowledged women as subjects in their own right. In the mainline Christian reading of the Genesis story, for example, Eve’s intellectual incapacity and inherent seductiveness demonstrate that women cannot be trusted to make the right choices and therefore must be supervised by their male guardians. Paul’s statement in his fi rst letter to the Corinthians corroborates this view of female defi ciency when he explains that women must cover their heads, but men must not, because men are made in the image of God but “woman is the glory of man” (I Corinthians 11: 7). At the same time, the author of 1 Timothy 2:11–12 commands: “Let the woman learn in silence with all subjection. But I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence.”2 And yet two traditions emerge in the early history of the Church, both of which may certainly be considered orthodox. As Suzanne Fonay Wemple observes: One was the tradition of the organized Church, which refl ected the prejudices of the patriarchal societies where Christianity was born and propagated.
The other was the contemplative and prophetic tradition, which kept alive the principle of equality proclaimed in the Gospels. (Women in Frankish Society 191) Evidence for both traditions is readily available in ecclesiastical texts from the earliest Church, but the relationship is (necessarily, I think) simplified in Wemple’s presentation, since the two traditions she seeks to differentiate are inextricably intertwined throughout. Paul, Augustine, Origen, Jerome, and Gregory, to name only a few of the most distinguished fi gures of the Church, all wrote and preached within both traditions without any clear break between the two, seeming to support both patriarchal biases and gender equality. Despite his restrictive policies regarding women, for example, Paul imagined a paradise in which “there is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Jesus Christ.”3 Augustine, likewise, displayed fervent admiration for his mother (who was responsible for his conversion), had female students, encouraged and applauded female piety, and seemed to admire a keen intellect in women as well as in men. Indeed, Peter Brown has shown that Christian women in the late antique period commanded a good deal of authority: “Much though they may have wished, at times, to snub their own protectresses in the same abrupt manner, the Christian clergy of late antiquity found that, in their community, infl uential women were there to stay” (Body and Society 146). Widows especially were highly regarded within ecclesiastical circles: “They were the only lay persons who accumulated all the attributes of effective members of the clergy, barring the crucial prerogative of ordained service at the altar” (148). Widows donated large sums of time, energy, and money to the Christian cause, which perhaps won them some freedom from rigid cultural constraints. Whatever the reason, women of means became a vital source of support for the growing grassroots movement, and they even conducted what may have been the earliest eucharistic ritual, hosting symbolic sacred dinners at their homes in imitation of the last supper.4 From the second to the fi fth centuries, women seem to have become credible members of Christian communities clustering around the Mediterranean, so that, Brown observes, “[a]ltogether, the Christian intelligentsia of the age took the presence of women, as disciples and patronesses, absolutely for granted” (Body and Society 152).
But lived experience, whether of few or many, can be easily obscured or even erased by an ideological program into which such experiences do not comfortably fi t. While a unifying program for the early Church is not readily ascertainable amid the array of ideologies vying for dominance, the question of female subject formation in any ideology of the early Church ultimately comes down to defi nitions of the soul and the gendering of the imago Dei. Here it is useful to turn to Augustine, since he not only exerted a tremendous infl uence over later generations of ecclesiastics, but he also, more than any other doctor of the Church, explored in depth possibilities for selfhood in the Christian framework, taking up ideas of gender as well as class and ethnicity in defi ning what it is to be human. Even for Augustine, however, there was clearly no easy way to defi ne the female as subject in the early Church. In explaining the disjunction between Paul’s mandate that the woman is the glory of man while the man is the image and glory of God (1 Cor 11:7) and his famous assertion on equality before God (Galatians 3:26–28), Augustine states: After all, the authority of the apostle as well as plain reason assures us that man was not made to the image of god as regards the shape of his body, but as regards his rational mind. . . . But because they are being renewed to the image of God where there is no sex, it is there where there is no sex that man [homo] was made to the image of God, that is in the spirit of his mind. . . . Well, it is only because she differs from the man in the sex of her body that her bodily covering could suitably be used to symbolize that part of the reason which is diverted to the management of temporal things, signifying that the mind of man does not remain the image of God except in the part which adheres to the eternal ideas to contemplate or consult them: and it is clear that females have this as well as males. So in their minds a common nature is to be acknowledged; but in their bodies the distribution of the one mind is symbolized.5
This passage renders the allegory of gender transparent, simple, and therefore harmless, since gender distinction merely symbolizes the duality of the human psyche—rational thought over sensual/material impulses. However, the allegorization of gender works because it grows out of the fi rmly implanted social assumption that, except in rare cases, men are superior in body and mind. In the same chapter of De Trinitate, explicating Paul’s dictum that women, but not men, should cover their heads, Augustine naturalizes that allegory by explaining it in terms of the gender hierarchy enacted through the social institution of marriage: . . . the woman with her husband is the image of God in such a way that the whole of that substance is one image, but when she is assigned her function of being an assistant, which is her concern alone, she is not the image of God; whereas in what concerns the man alone he is the image of God as fully and completely as when the woman is joined to him in one whole. We said about the nature of the human mind that if it is all contemplating truth it is the image of God; and when something is drawn off from it and assigned or directed in a certain way to the management of temporal affairs, it is still all the same the image of God as regards the part with which it consults the truth it has gazed on; but as regards the part which is directed to managing these lower affairs, it is not the image of God.6 Augustine reads Paul’s statements on gender symbolically in order to articulate the mystery of the human self. Both traditions relating to women—liberal and conservative—are apparent in Augustine’s reading.
The symbolic allows an egalitarian interpretation whereby it is the human mind, not the body, that is created in the image of God. And yet for Augustine as well as for Paul, the symbolic is heavily grounded in the social and cannot therefore be extricated from it. In Augustine’s interpretation, the man represents high reason, which contemplates the eternal wonders of God, and the woman represents lower reason, which tends to temporal things. Both men and women, Augustine remarks, have higher and lower rational capacities, a view that seems almost liberal in its provision of a loophole for women who would devote their lives to divine contemplation. But domesticity and sensuality belong to the “lower” realm, and both defi ne women in Greco-Roman and in Judaic societies. Therefore, although women may still aspire to the image of God, they may do so only when they completely detach themselves from society and use that part of the mind that relates to things eternal. Men, however, may achieve the same simply by living their lives “naturally” and socially as men. Whether or not women can ever fully extricate themselves from their social duties is another question entirely. Augustine’s explication of Genesis, for example, states that women are important primarily as childbearers: Or if woman was not made for the help of bearing sons (fi lios) for man, for what help then was she made? Not yet was there labor, so that he should require help, and, if there had been need, a male would become a better help. For how much more harmonious for living and conversing together that two equal friends should live together than man and woman.
To Augustine it would seem that women’s subservience is part of the natural order established in Genesis. Book twelve of De Civitate Dei argues that man is preeminent among all other creatures of the earth because he was created in the image of God. Here Augustine privileges Adam only, the male of the species, who “was created as one individual, but was not left alone.”8 Elsewhere Augustine explains the creation of woman as supplement: God created man as one individual; but that did not mean that he was to remain alone, bereft of human society. God’s intention was that in this way the unity of human society and the bonds of human sympathy be more emphatically brought home to man, if men were bound together not merely by likeness in nature but also by the feeling of kinship. And to this end, when he created the woman who was to be joined with the man he decided not to create her in the same way as he created man himself. Instead he made her out of the man, so that the whole human race should spread out from one original man.9 Society and kinship emerge as vital aspects of God’s plan, where women accommodate men by bearing sons and populating the earth so that men can bond socially with other men and rejoice in copies of themselves (and, of course, of God). Most importantly, tracing the human race back to one original man rather than back to both Adam and Eve as a couple precludes the possibility of an equal partnership between them and neutralizes the life-giving potential of the female body. In De Civitate Dei, a work of his later years informed by a seasoned intellect and his many years as a Church leader, Augustine clearly takes masculine superiority for granted when he explains that men’s beards are for ornamentation: There are some details in the body which are there simply for aesthetic reasons, and for no practical purpose—for example, the nipples on a man’s chest, and the beard on his face, the latter being clearly for a masculine ornament, not for protection. This is shown by the fact that women’s faces are hairless, and since women are the weaker sex, it would surely be more appropriate for them to be given such protection.
Perhaps he is simply thinking in terms of physical strength here, but body and soul are, for Augustine, inextricably linked. Augustine’s statements cited thus far seem to suggest that women are trapped by their own bodies, which are construed as weak, seductive, and distastefully imbued with the concerns of the world. But other statements favor a more nuanced reading in which women are trapped not just by the society that has naturalized their physical and sexual inferiority, but by the souls that shaped those weak, dangerous bodies in the fi rst place. In chapter 24 of De Immortalitate Animae, for example, Augustine argues that the body takes its form from the soul and that form gives the body its beauty: It is not what pertains to the mass of a body, but that which pertains to its form, species, which gives a body its being. This view is established by reasoning which cannot be faulted.
The more fully a body is, the more formed and beautiful it is, and the more ugly and deformed it is, the less fully it is. This loss comes about not by a reduction of the mass, which we have already discussed, but rather by deprivation of the form.11 If the masculine body surpasses the feminine body in form, then, by implication, the masculine soul must surpass the feminine soul as well. Always. As much as Augustine tries to elevate women interested in propagating the faith, he always falls back on the underlying assumption of female inferiority: physical, spiritual, natural, and social, and his ideas were instrumental in promoting that view for subsequent centuries. For E. Ann Matter, Augustine’s ambivalent position—that women both are and are not in the image of God—became a useful tool that allowed ecclesiastical authorities to maintain male sacramental authority and restrict female power within the Church (“The Undebated Debate”). Even if that ambiguity prompted creative solutions for certain gifted and privileged women who found communities in which they could live in the image of God, the fact that the question never came to theological debate meant that women never would offi cially be seen to participate in the imago Dei and, thus, would never be recognized as autonomous subjects in the dominant view of the Church (ibid., esp. 42, 45).
Ideally, perhaps, Christianity offered certain women the promise of active subject positions. But the Church clearly had reservations about any autonomy it offered. The Aristotelian notion that man represents reason and woman sense becomes a defi ning article of gender-formation in Christian ideology throughout the early Church and into the early medieval period. The reason/sense paradigm would hinder the formation of the female subject, in that her body served as a constant reminder of human vulnerability, original sin, and the dangers of female seduction. Ambrose’s cosmological order, for example, requires absolute separation of what Brown calls “potent antitheses—Christian and pagan, Catholic and heretic, Bible truth and ‘worldly’ guesswork, Church and saeculum, soul and body” (Body and Society 346). Such a dualistic world vision assumes the inherently dangerous quality of the feminine, where the Christian self is unmistakably male and put upon by the various feminine forces set loose in the world, as Brown convincingly argues. That Ambrose had close relations with his sister, Marcellina, and with other women who devoted themselves to Christ, does not appear to moderate either his view of the generic Christian subject as male or his implicit distrust of the female. Like the Blessed Virgin Mary, whom Ambrose venerated highly, these female devotees had apparently so steeled their bodies that they became impenetrable, invulnerable, inviolate, and male-like. In order for a woman to shape herself within the parameters of the Christian discourse of the late antique period, therefore, she often had to redefi ne herself as a man. Margaret Miles focuses specifi cally on this phenomenon in Carnal Knowing, where she argues that the early Christian self is by defi nition masculine. Examining patristic accounts of successful Christian women, Miles shows how women, in order to defi ne themselves as subjects within the Christian discourse of the early Church, typically must “become male.”12
In these cultural circumstances, Miles concludes, “For women . . . courage, conscious choice, and self-possession constituted gender transgression” (Carnal Knowing 55). It is worth noting here that Miles uses texts dating primarily to the late antique period when the body was increasingly considered a source of pollution and anxiety. In the dominant ideology of the ascendant Church, therefore, possibilities for female subject formation are limited: a woman must construct herself as male in order to participate, and so must doubly deny her personal self in the interests of corporate identity; she must be content to subject herself to God through her subjection to a man, but never emerge as a subject in her own right; or she must resign herself to a life of abjection, a condition culturally unintelligible within the dominant ideological framework. But the early Middle Ages is characterized by tremendous fl ux, and the Church, as in the late antique period, is hardly sure in its aims and agenda. Close scrutiny of the period reveals the fl uidity of Christian ideologies and what we call orthodoxy. If orthodoxy became staunchly antifeminist, as it so often seems, it is because a patriarchal ideology eventually came to dominate the contesting hegemonies of early Christianity in the West. Even such austere, self-assured Fathers of the Church as Paul, Jerome, and Augustine would alternately affi rm and subvert pervasive masculinist biases. The fact that ecclesiastical councils could reject and label certain ideas heretical—as with the Pelagian and Arian controversies13—would seem to suggest a fi rm sense of orthodoxy, and the fact that the deciding body was predominantly male-biased makes orthodoxy appear antifeminist. But the early Church, unwieldy with expansion, could not yet make such clear distinctions because so much was still being discussed and debated and even left unresolved. Even when certain matters were decided, they may not have been decided unanimously or have been realistically enforceable in all cultural milieux. No longer a Mediterranean cult, Christianity had to adapt to increasingly remote and diverse cultures, resulting in greater confusion, confl ict, and compromise. Orthodoxy in early medieval Frankish, Gaulish, Anglo-Saxon, or Saxon terms was a hope, but never a reality. The continued spread of Christianity and the intermingling of Mediterranean, Celtic, and Germanic cultures that characterizes the early medieval period complicate notions of selfhood, particularly in relation to gender. The position of women in Germanic culture differed from that of their Roman and Mediterranean counterparts. Germanic societies seemed to have held women in high regard in spiritual and perhaps even intellectual matters.
Tacitus provides evidence concerning Germanic women in the fi rst century,14 exclaiming surprise at the high social status of women, who enter into marriage as equal partners: Lest the woman think herself outside notions of virtue and beyond the dangers of war, from the very opening ceremonies of matrimony she herself is admonished to come as a partner in labors and perils, ready to suffer and to dare the same in peace, the same in war: this is what the yoked oxen, the caparisoned horse, the gift of weapons, signify.15 According to Tacitus, Germanic women were to fulfi ll not only the duties of wives, mothers, nurses, and providers, but also counselors: “They also believe that there is something holy and provident in women, and so they do not spurn their counsels or ignore their responses.”16 The reputation of the Germanic prophetesses, Tacitus reminds his readers, extends to Rome as well: “We [Romans] have seen under the divine Vespasian that Veleda for a long time and according to many was considered a goddess; but also in times past they worshipped Aurinia and many others, not in adulation or as if they would make them goddesses.”17 For J. M. Wallace-Hadrill, Tacitus found in Germany of the fi rst century a virtual golden age for women: [Tacitus] says (what Caesar confi rms) that the Germans believed their women to possess a spiritual power denied to men; they had a divine spark of foreknowledge and thus their advice was not to be overlooked, even on military questions. Aside from her natural gifts and abilities, the Germanic woman was a prophetess. So, too, were Celtic women; and the two came together in western Europe to fuse into a formidable female instrument for plumbing the unseen. Moreover, she was a healer. For good or ill she was associated with magic.
(The Frankish Church 404) These observations suggest a fair degree of authority and social autonomy. More recent scholars are skeptical. Wemple argues that “This special regard . . . must have been limited to a few prophetesses, for women were excluded from the assemblies” (Women in Frankish Society 11). Tacitus’s observations must also be scrutinized in terms of his own motivations and political agenda. As Janet Nelson remarks: Tacitus, writing not ethnology but ethics for Romans, was making the point that female hostages ought to be accepted from Germans, contrary to Roman practice, and his invocation of religious to impute political standing was a characteristic piece of elision: effective, of course, precisely because the Romans themselves were familiar with the idea that women could function as mouthpieces of “a holy something.” Yet of Germans’ attitudes to their women, Tacitus took care to add: “they never treated them with adulation, as goddesses.” (“Women and the Word” 60) Clearly, Romans had some reference point for understanding the importance of female spirituality to the Germanic tribes, but apparently they were unable to gauge the extent of female piety in Germanic terms. On the whole, though, scholars agree that women held some spiritual authority in Germanic areas at least into the eleventh century, though opinions vary as to degree. It is possible that women had gradually lost their esteemed position between Tacitus’s time and the earliest recorded laws of Germanic tribes. Nevertheless, in light of such cultural differences regarding women, it would seem that what was ecclesiastically forbidden by the Roman Church may have been culturally viable, or even required, in the outskirts of converted territory, which by the eighth century extended north and east to Frisia and Saxony, Germanic tribal regions that still regarded women as purveyors of piety.18 Active participation of female religious in these regions may have been expected, perhaps even required. Women also had some legal and property rights. In Anglo-Saxon England, for example, a marriage union could not be fi nalized without the woman’s consent. And instead of a dowry, the Anglo-Saxon morgengifu, “morning gift,” sealed the pact. The morgengifu was paid on the fi rst morning of their marriage by a husband to his wife, not to her family. According to Christine Fell, that gift could be substantial and could be made in the form of land (Women in Anglo-Saxon England 56–57). Moreover, Fell explains: “The morgengifu was not the only property the wife had a right to, but different laws divide the matrimonial estate in different ways. They do, however, make it clear that within a marriage the fi nances are held to be the property of husband and wife, not of husband only” (ibid. 57). Not only did a woman have a say upon entering into marriage and have some control over properties independently and in conjunction with her husband, but she also, presumably in extreme circumstances, could choose to leave the marriage:
According to the laws of Æðelbert a woman had the right to walk out of a marriage that did not please her, though I do not fi nd this particular freedom reiterated in the later laws. Since, if she took the children with her, she was also entitled to take half the property, she seems to have had reasonable independence and security. (ibid. 57) If Germanic women were so highly regarded and if they were responsible for guarding and passing on religious obligation and observation, it is puzzling that they should so quickly have been swayed to new beliefs. From a modern perspective, they seem to have been ineffective guardians who willfully participated in their own subjugation by accepting the Christian patriarchal ideology. The key may lie in perceptions of the female body. In early Germanic culture, the body functions as the source of both female autonomy and female subjugation. Because they were so vital to the survival and proper functioning of their tribe, Germanic women were more closely guarded and more harshly punished for their transgressions. Women had to keep their bodies—from which their special attributes came—pure.19 The primary evidence yields diverse interpretations, however. According to Wallace-Hadrill: Married, the Frankish woman held the honour of two kindreds in her keeping: her husband’s and her father’s. In this respect the wife’s responsibility was the greater and the risks she ran if she dishonoured either kindred correspondingly greater. Thus burdened, she was no mere chattel. She could hold and administer land, defend herself in the courts, act as compurgator, make donations and free her slaves if she wished. The higher her social rank the likelier it was that she would carry many other responsibilities than care for her household. In short, a queen was an honorary man. (The Frankish Church 404–405) Wallace-Hadrill’s reading of Tacitus may be overly optimistic. Wemple offers a more sobering reading: Tacitus enumerated humiliating penalties for adultery, which applied only to wives. The female corpse found by archaeologists in the peat bog at Windeby in Domland, buried naked with a blindfold over her eyes, a hide collar on her neck, and her hair shaven, lends credence to Tacitus’ description of how a cuckold husband punished his wife.20 Jo Ann McNamara and Jane Tibbets Schulenburg agree that by the early Middle Ages Germanic society offered little for women but abuse and subjugation.21 Women may have had certain legal rights to property and protection, but for the most part they lived with the ongoing fear of rape and abuse and therefore were already subjugated to an unforgiving patriarchal order. Over a century ago, Lina Eckenstein puzzled over the question of early Germanic women in relation to the Church. To make sense of it, she argues for a more complex view of women in Germanic society than is generally acknowledged.
Whereas Tacitus provides useful clues about a particular moment in Germanic prehistory, Eckenstein argues that they should not be taken to represent ages of Germanic culture, since Germanic society evolved like any other. She postulates an earlier period, the “mother-age,” in which women were not only respected, but revered. As Roman acculturation increased and “heathendom” declined, so too did women’s position in society: During the period of declining heathendom the drift of society had been towards curtailing woman’s liberty of movement and interfering with her freedom of action. When the Germans crossed the threshold of history the characteristics of the father-age were already in the ascendant; the social era, when the growing desire for certainty of fatherhood caused individual women and their offspring to be brought into the possession of individual men, had already begun. The infl uence of women was more and more restricted owing to their domestic subjection. But traditions of a time when it had been otherwise still lingered. . . . At the time when contact with Christianity brought with it the possibility of monastic settlements, the love of domestic life had not penetrated so deeply, nor were its conditions so uniformly favourable, but that many women were ready to break away from it. (Women under Monasticism 3) Here Eckenstein offers a glimpse, albeit from afar, of resistant, willful, and active female subjects, and a scenario where the Church was an enabler rather than an oppressor of female autonomy.
In doing so, she makes a daring comparison between prostitutes and female religious: On the face of it, a greater contrast than that between the loose woman and the nun is hard to conceive, and yet they have this in common, that they are both the outcome of the refusal among womankind to accept married relations on the basis of the subjection imposed by the father-age. (ibid. 5) The connection helps explain why women, who were seen as guardians of faith, so readily converted to another faith. The Christian Church, with its emphasis on chastity and cloistered spiritual development, offered willful women an escape from domestic abuse and bondage. In this scenario, these women were not passive recipients of newly assigned roles, but active subjects redefi ning themselves in an increasingly hostile society. Conversionary and cultural confusions offered women various opportunities for power and productivity in the public sphere. Nevertheless, the freedom enjoyed by early female monastics in Anglo-Saxon England, Francia, and Saxony was lamentably short-lived as Roman ideologies gained precedence.
Women had served as preachers, however unoffi cially, missionaries, and to a large extent as public servants, much like their male counterparts.22 Under Boniface (ca. 675–754), Anglo-Saxon missionaries in the outer limits of converted territories may have enjoyed the greatest amount of freedom and autonomy, since they were desperately needed and of necessity worked with little immediate supervision. They were not just passive, virginal devotees, but teachers of the faith.
The Vita of one particularly strong missionary woman of this period, Leoba, offers insight into the attitudes of the period, though this source, too, must be treated with caution, since it was written by a monk of Fulda in the midst of ecclesiastical reform about fi fty years after her death. Leoba’s learning, the monk Rudolf relates, was legendary even in her own time, but equally noteworthy was her engagement with the secular community. A parish church erected in her honor in 837, about fi fty years after her death and for which Rudolf’s Vita was probably commissioned, still stands just east of Fulda, witness to her active involvement with the public and her importance to the monastic community at Fulda and its abbot, Hrabanus Maurus, who founded the church and retired there. Although the church was dedicated to St. Peter, it is also still called Liobaskirche in her memory. Since its erection, the church has held the relics of Leoba in a wall reliquary installed by Hrabanus himself; her head and body have since been interred there in special caskets as well. In her own monastic community, Boniface placed in her both his trust and authority to rule according to her own ideals: In furtherance of his [missionary] aims [Boniface] appointed persons in authority over the monasteries and established the observance of regular discipline: he placed Sturm as abbot over the monks and Leoba as abbess over the nuns. He gave her the monastery at a place called Bischofsheim, where there was a large community of nuns.
These were trained according to her prin-ciples in the discipline of monastic life and made such progress in her teaching that many of them afterward became superiors of others, so that there was hardly a convent of nuns in that part that had not one of her disciples as abbess.23 Stephanie Hollis points out that it was Leoba, not Boniface, who initiated their relationship in the fi rst place when she wrote a letter to him, accompanied by a gift, introducing herself as his kinswoman (Anglo-Saxon Women and the Church 277). Boniface and Leoba became close and, if Rudolf’s account is to be trusted, the relationship gave her a certain amount of monastic clout: Sometimes she came to the monastery of Fulda to say her prayers, a privilege never granted to any woman either before or since, because from the day that monks began to dwell there entrance was always forbidden to women. Permission was granted only to her, for the simple reason that the holy martyr Saint Boniface had recommended her to the seniors of the monastery and because he had ordered her remains to be buried there.24 Rudolf tells us that Leoba also became a favorite at Charlemagne’s court, and that Queen Hildegard held her as something akin to a soulmate.
If her Vita shows that Leoba exercised a degree of authority and autonomy comparable to her male counterparts, it also shows that only Leoba (or other such divinely marked women) could. Such privileges were not available to ordinary women, however devoted. Rudolf can, I think, be trusted in his account of Leoba’s approved visitations to Fulda and also to Charlemagne’s court, because he would have had no cause to encourage such visitations. But Rudolf underscores the monks’ careful observance of the rule of separation even during her visits in order to prevent others from following suit: The following regulations, however, were observed when she came there. Her disciples and companions were left behind in a nearby cell and she entered the monastery always in daylight, with one nun older than the rest; and after she had fi nished her prayers and held a conversation with the brethren, she returned toward nightfall to her disciples whom she had left behind in the cell.
Even though Rudolf writes from his own time, probably around 837, when enclosure and segregation were becoming more strictly observed, it was Boniface who, as abbot of Fulda, made segregation the rule for that monastery. Moreover, Boniface worked toward the restriction of women ecclesiastics, initiating a reform in Frankish regions where all monastic houses were forced to conform to the Benedictine rule under the supervision of a bishop.26 The repercussions of this act proved more serious for women than for men, since women had no representation among the bishops. Leoba’s case aside, Boniface also advocated the separation of men and women religious and strict enclosure of female monastics, a policy his successor, Lul, would enforce strictly.27 Thus, during the course of the fi rst millennium confl icting ideals served to advance and restrict, in turns, women’s stature in Church and society. The cultural confusions produced by expansion allowed greater autonomy for women, both within the Church and in the newly converted territories connected to the Church, as is evident, particularly, among early Anglo-Saxon and Merovingian women.28
There is no question that a woman’s power was unstable and her authority open to question; nonetheless, Janet Nelson and others have shown that women were able to move much more easily between social spheres than their male counterparts—from slave girl or prostitute to queen or empress, for example. In the religious milieu, the practical needs of the expanding Church made it possible for women—as abbesses, missionaries, and even, in certain instances, preachers—to wield substantial power with relatively little supervision, in contrast to later periods. In this assertion I am not supporting the notion of an early medieval golden age for women, not even in the earliest moments of English Christianization; instead, following the differing models of Clare Lees, Gillian Overing, Shari Horner, and Stephanie Hollis, among others, I trace the complexities of ecclesiastical culture involved in shaping possibilities for women. Female autonomy waned during various reform movements, which sought to fortify the institution of the Church against the nebulous evils of the world.
The association of those dangerous forces with the female essence made women a likely target of ecclesiastical reform. The rapid spread of Christianity brought fragmentation of the Christian message, as unlearned, barely literate priests with their own vision of the faith took it upon themselves to interpret the scriptures. Councils and synods were periodically organized to address the major issues, but strenuous and concerted reform efforts were deemed necessary to stem the fl ow of error and heresy. Although the institution of the Church suffered quite obviously from spreading itself too thin, too quickly, the juxtaposition of male reason against female sensuality seems to have colored the perception of such crises.
Women were crucial to the conversionary efforts, but they were still women. And even though women as such are not explicitly connected with any of the major heretical movements of the late antique period and the early Middle Ages, an example of the association of error and heresy with women can be seen in the acts of the Roman synod of 745 that condemns the priests Aldebert and Clemens and removes them from the priesthood. In the course of the proceedings, Pope Zachary declares that Aldebert is mad and that all who use his letter (which he claimed to be written by Jesus himself and dropped by the Archangel Michael) are mentally defi cient “and rage with certain womanly notions.”29 That womanly sensibilities are associated with madness and heresy demonstrates a pervasive distrust of the feminine in the ideology of the Church. Individual women may excel, primarily by demonstrating their virility and thereby escaping the taint of their gender, but the female gender as a whole remains suspect. The changing demands of ecclesiastical order resulted in drastically reduced roles for women within that order. As Schulenburg explains:
The Church . . . found itself in a position to attempt to enforce its gender-based restrictive policies which had been ignored or necessarily mitigated during its initial stages of development (especially during the period of the missionary movement in the north of Europe and Britain). Thus the reforms of the Carolingians (followed by those of the Cluniacs, the reforms of Gerard of Brogne, Gorze, and Richard of St. Vanne, the tenth-century English reform, and papal or Gregorian reform) introduced policies which tried to control and regularize religious activities. They worked, in general, to limit women’s public involvement and their leadership activities in the Church and society through the demarcation of a “proper” feminine sphere and a delineation of female nature, abilities, rights, and responsibilities. (Forgetful of Their Sex 108) The fi rst serious reform efforts were instituted under the papacy of Zachary by Boniface in eighth-century Francia. Although relatively minor in scale, Boniface’s efforts set in motion a series of reforms on the continent and in England over the next two centuries. The fi rst major reform began under Charlemagne and continued with unprecedented vigor under his successor, Louis the Pious.
The Carolingian reforms in turn became a model for English reforms of the ninth century under Alfred the Great as well as the English and continental Benedictine reforms of the tenth and early eleventh centuries. Each of these reform movements had as their goal the strengthening of Church doctrine through establishment of uniform liturgical practices, scriptures, and language, as well as through improvement of educational resources, especially for the ordained. Each reform movement has been shown to have restricted drastically the roles and voice of women.30 In such restrictive environments, women cannot even construct themselves as male and are denied any active, public roles. Women on the fringes no doubt formed alternate modes of discourse, but such alternate forms remained culturally unintelligible and therefore inaccessible. Moreover, any products of such radical discourse certainly would not have escaped the censorship of the Church; if vestiges survive, they are virtually undecipherable because of our training and our own cultural biases, a problem feminists are beginning to address.31 Resistance to reform can be detected, however, even in the most restrictive periods among the ecclesiastical elite and among women of privilege, as we shall see.
Because it is impossible to separate practice from ideology completely, it may be productive to ask to what extent ideology informs the real or experiential. We ought to acknowledge that ecclesiastical statements, conciliar mandates, and exegetical commentary were often composed in the interests of conversion and solidifi cation and therefore provide inaccurate testimony to their own cultural circumstances. In much the same way, the state of orthodoxy the Church tried to proclaim for itself was little more than an effort toward conformity. It is diffi cult, therefore, to decide how much weight to give the various statements on women in the expansion/conversion periods of Christianity. Might the more egalitarian statements have been something like campaign propaganda? Or, conversely, could it be that strict policies were propaganda—drafted to placate a patriarchal elite, but never truly enforced? And how can we decide the extent to which ecclesiastical mandates were followed or enforced from one region to the next, particularly since the same statutes appear in the records synod after synod? We probably will never know, but we must keep the questions in view.
As Jacqueline Murray cautions, following Caroline Walker Bynum and Joan Wallach Scott, “Our historical vantage point frequently blinds us to alternative interpretations and dissent from the ideology which prevailed in a society” (“Thinking about Gender” 2).32 To accept uncritically the recorded hegemonic ideology as a universal is to replicate and promote that ideology even when we seek to expose it. Alerting ourselves to alternative possibilities, we may discover that “rather than a monolithic ‘medieval view,’ a monovocalic discourse of misogyny, there was a diversity of opinion, even within what might broadly be termed ‘the Church’” (ibid. 3), and even during periods of reform. The aim of this book is not to trace historical moments, however, but to understand how women were perceived, and how they perceived themselves, within their particular social and historical circumstances—the “Real” conditions of their existence.
In other words, to consider whether women are able to emerge as autonomous subjects during these moments and, if so, how. The concept of a female subject in early medieval Christianity, as in our own time, poses complicated questions and requires some theoretical underpinning. Louis Althusser’s “scientifi c” or structuralist approach to identity formation is helpful as a starting place, removing as it does historical and social variables and contemplating instead how individuals are formed within a larger community. For Althusser, subjects are created not in a material world, but in Ideology (or rather in not one but several ideologies or belief systems operating simultaneously), which is simply a way to imagine the relationship of the individual to the material world. In his paradigm, interpellation is the means by which ideology brings subjects into being.33
Through language, individuals are hailed or called into being and their response signals participation in and locates them within that system. Dynamics of power and oppression are realized and reinforced through language, from the speaking subject to spoken (listening) subject. According to Althusser, “You and I are always already subjects, and as such constantly practice the rituals of ideological recognition, which guarantee for us that we are indeed concrete, individual, distinguishable and (naturally) irreplaceable subjects” (“Ideology and the State” 117).
This is not to say that the emergence of a dominant culture is a conscious process with clearly scripted roles, clear leaders, and certain paths to power; rather, the constitution of any dominant culture is itself a complex process of becoming with too many variables (political, historical, personal, social, philosophical, etc.) to be controllable or even traceable. All individuals are “always already” subjects because the ideology that informs them always precedes them. But subjectivity is a double-edged sword: the subject is both a “free agent” and a “subjected being.” We are interpellated as subjects in the name of a unique and absolute Subject (i.e., God in the Christian order), which, according to Althusser, “means that all ideology is centred, that the Absolute Subject occupies the unique place of the centre, and interpellates around it the infi nity of individuals into subjects in a double mirror-connexion such that it subjects the subjects to the Subject, while giving them in the Subject . . . the guarantee that this really concerns them and Him” (ibid. 122).
The construction of a Christian cosmology necessarily arranges beings and determines subject positions within that order. But within that order, the importance of choice must be underscored. Althusser describes a decidedly reciprocal relationship in which power is maintained and continued through the subjects’ free will: “the individual is interpellated as a (free) subject in order that he shall submit freely to the commandments of the subject” (ibid. 123).
To be successful, subjects must (be made to) desire their own subjection to a particular world order created around an Absolute Subject. In the Christian order, this desire is effected through the full reciprocity of the subject–Subject relationship—that is, God, too, as Supreme Subject, “needs me, the great Subject needs subjects, even in the terrible inversion of his image in them (when the subjects wallow in debauchery, i.e. sin)” (ibid. 122). He does this, Althusser speculates, “as if to show empirically, visibly to the eye, tangibly to the hands . . . of the subjects, that, if they are subjects, subjected to the Subject, that is solely in order that fi nally, on Judgment Day, they will reenter the Lord’s bosom, like Christ, i.e. re-enter the Subject” (ibid. 122). The process of subject formation that Althusser outlines becomes more complex when contextualized in historical and social realities where multiple ideologies complement one another and also compete for subject participation. Moreover, as free agents, subjects can interpret the meaning of the initial hailing and can also resist interpellation. For Michel Foucault, the process of identity formation is an effect of power, and that power operates at the most basic premises of existence: in the relationship between body and soul.
In Discipline and Punish, Foucault theorizes a soul born of historical reality—not the idealized soul of religious belief systems. For Foucault’s immediate topic of discussion, of course, it is the soul of the condemned created by modern systems of power. But the particular noncorporeal element that Foucault defi nes in his discussion can be extended beyond the condemned and beyond the modern circumstance to explain subject positions in relation to power: “It would be wrong to say that the soul is an illusion, or an ideological effect. On the contrary, it exists, it has a reality, it is produced permanently around, on, within the body by the functioning of a power that is exercised on those punished—and, in a more general way, on those one supervises, trains and corrects, over madmen, children at home and at school, the colonized, over those who are stuck at a machine and supervised for the rest of their lives” (Discipline and Punish 29). This soul Foucault describes is born “out of methods of punishment, supervision and constraint”; it is not a substance, but an element “in which are articulated the effects of a certain type of power and the reference of a certain type of knowledge, the machinery by which the power relations give rise to a possible corpus of knowledge, and knowledge extends and reinforces the effects of this power” (ibid.).
In short, “the soul is the effect and instrument of a political anatomy; the soul is the prison of the body” (ibid. 30). Michel Foucault’s defi ant reversal of a “truism” pervasive in Western thought, that the body is the prison of the soul, may help tease out the vexed relationship between body and soul and, more specifi c to the purposes of this book, trace the subtle and far-reaching impact of that relationship on female subject formation in early ecclesiastical culture. Reading through that reversal—that the soul is the prison of the body—in Christian terms, one may say that the female body is not a trap, but rather the mark of a predetermined subjugation. Women are always already scripted as inferior. Neither Althusser nor Foucault considers the importance of gender to subject formation but rather both presume a universal subject from their own experience as men and working from a long masculinist tradition in Western thought.34 While their ideas are helpful in tracing subjectivities, the question of gender and subject formation requires further thought.
We could say that the early medieval female subject, like the modern female subject, is never really culturally intelligible, but only aspires to be so. In the early medieval period—and for most of history—defi nition of the female subject has been shaped by males or used for masculinist ends. The female self serves merely as a mirror that refl ects the masculine subject. From her assigned position at the margins, her abjectness defi nes the masculine subject at the center.35 The woman who comes into her own on her own terms remains culturally unspeakable, unrecognizable. She is the one who disrupts, upsets, breaks what Luce Irigaray calls “the circularity of [men’s] exchanges” (199), and she is categorically dismissed, unintelligible in terms of the dominant, masculinist culture.
Judith Butler asserts there can be only limited possibilities for female subject formation in a masculinist social order that makes the female into the negative space, the abject other against which the masculine subject is defi ned. And yet she sees in the rigidity and compulsory insistence of that order opportunities for resistance—places where the subordinate, peripheral female other can materialize as a culturally intelligible subject. For Butler, the body is not a blank page on which constructs of identity are imposed. Rather, the body itself is integral to formations of identity; indeed, it forms the core of identity production in the very process of becoming recognizable in language—its materialization. Butler insists upon “a rethinking of the process by which a bodily norm is assumed, appropriated, taken on as not, strictly speaking, undergone by a subject, but rather that the subject, the speaking ‘I,’ is formed by virtue of having gone through such a process of assuming a sex” (Bodies that Matter 3; author’s emphasis). That process is necessarily exclusionary, since it “enables certain sexed identifi cations and forecloses and/or disavows other identifi cations” (ibid.).
The evolution of the female subject can be understood, therefore, as a process of materialization and dematerialization. We cannot know the body as it was prior to its being described; it becomes culturally intelligible or perceptible only through that process of materialization. This book discerns three states of being for women in early medieval Germania: subject, supplementary or adjunct subject, and abject other. In the simplest terms, conversionary periods offer the most positive circumstances for the formation of viable, culturally intelligible female subjects in the Christian framework of the early Church, while reform periods recognize women as only supplementary subjects or abjected beings entirely. Even the most rigid ideological rituals, traditions, and models in their richness, however, necessarily contain gaps and fi ssures out of which individuated subjectivities can emerge. Moreover, women were never universally opposed to reform measures, either in England or on the continent.
Thus, while Christian ideology grounded in patristic exegesis and Judeo-Christian distrust of the female body never seems to acknowledge fully the possibility of an autonomous female subject, active female subjects can be detected in these volatile areas, either within or against the dominant discourse that informs them. Chapter 2 takes up the question of female subject possibilities during the early Carolingian reforms. Following the expansive and relatively liberal attitude of the Merovingian period, the Church seems to have found itself in crisis—too many directions, too many rules, too many leaders. The sense of fragmentation apparently became alarming, and those in power took measures to unify and centralize. While reform measures addressed such cultural concerns as education, conformity of ritual, and uniformity of texts, they also targeted women. Though the Church had long relied upon women for support and owed much of its success during periods of conversion to the efforts of women, the Church as an institution seems never to have been quite comfortable with its dependence on “the weaker sex.” The deeds of dynamic individuals, such as Radegund of Poitiers, Queen Balthild, and Leoba of Tauberbischofsheim, to name but a few, did little to offset enduring prejudices against women, which are reiterated again and again in sacred texts, patristic exegesis, and contemporary chronicles. Literally and fi guratively, women were considered dangerous, seductive, polluted, and weak, and their infl uence within the Church was therefore restricted. Even in the midst of reform, however, resistance sometimes asserted itself in the form of outright refusal to comply, as demonstrated by the necessary repetition of certain conciliar mandates restricting the activity of female monastics, for example. Another form of resistance can be seen among the ecclesiastical elite in their refusal unilaterally to accept and promote antifeminist dogma.
Chapter 3 focuses on the works of one such reformer, Alcuin of York, and what they reveal about alternate perspectives of women in the period. Alcuin is by no means the only liberal thinker, but he was the most prolifi c and the most politic, meaning that he wrote for communities and individuals, not just for abstract ideals, and therefore was more publicly connected than most of the ecclesiastical elite. By presenting Alcuin as a liberal voice, I do not mean to suggest that his views challenge mainstream Church principles of the day or that he is especially radical. Rather, I hope to show that Alcuin, by promoting egalitarian ideals already in place from the earliest days of the Church—ideals relating to intellect, education, wisdom, and salvation—cultivates a space in which strong, autonomous female subjects may continue to evolve. Although Alcuin brought his liberal perspective from the cultural context of Anglo-Saxon England, the lived experience of women there does not appear to have refl ected that degree of liberality. The fourth chapter considers cultural evidence and critical perspectives relating to female subject possibilities in Anglo-Saxon England. Some early scholars have painted a rather optimistic picture of women’s status in AngloSaxon England, blaming the fallen condition of women on the Norman Conquest.36 While there is a general agreement that women did in some sense have greater autonomy in the early Anglo-Saxon period, more recent scholarship reveals more continuity than discontinuity in women’s status during the pre- and post-conquest periods. Schulenburg and Hollis, among others, argue that there is already a signifi cant reduction in female autonomy by the ninth century. Moreover, Schulenburg shows that, during the Anglo-Saxon period in general, women only have as much power as their male guardians or relatives allow them within the patriarchal domains of Church and state (an observation that could probably be extended to much of the early medieval West).37
Early letters, such as Eangyth’s letter to Boniface (Tangl 14), reveal autonomous women negotiating their allotted space, still able to express themselves within it, but trying not to “break the circle” as they do so. Later, after several waves of reform, masculinist constructions of the female subject dominate, representing women stereotypically and artifi cially in a few carefully delineated domestic, rather than public, roles. In such constructions, women have become a mirror, the perfect refl ection of the patriarchal order, not subjects at all. By way of example, chapter 4 examines two such reform texts, the so-called transvestite saints’ lives. These late Anglo-Saxon renderings of the legends complicate the examination of gendered subject formation. While it would seem to be a genre in which women may emerge as empowered subjects, these particular versions of the legends, exploited for the reform agenda, simply reinforce masculinist constructions of female subjectivity by validating women who reject their femininity quite literally. Ælfric’s version of the Eugenia legend and the anonymous Old English Life of St. Euphrosyne reaffi rm the model of the masculine Christian self. In order to participate successfully, women must renounce their femininity as actively as Eugenia and Euphrosyne do, undergoing a fi gurative conversion from female to male in order to experience full conversion to Christianity. Rather than encouraging women to dress as men in order to lead active, infl uential lives, however, both texts demonstrate that one can never truly escape one’s “natural” gender, and effectively serve to keep women in their restricted places. Chapter 5 focuses on representations of Mary and Eve in reform texts. Representations of the Virgin Mary discourage rather than encourage female agency and autonomy in this period. That the Virgin Mary fi gures prominently in the literature of late Anglo-Saxon England and is the center of a rising cult does not suggest any sort of empowerment for women: the Anglo-Saxon Mary is not the personalized mother that Hrotsvit of Gandersheim depicts nor the powerful Madonna that Mariolatry of the later Middle Ages would make her. Although the Blickling and Ælfrician homilies devote a good deal of attention to the fi gure of Mary, they are concerned more with her connection to King David and the assurance of the Christ child’s proper and pure birth than with anything relating to women in general. Ælfric’s homilies focus intently on Mary’s virginity. She qualifi es to serve as the mother of God simply because she is a link to the otherwise male blood line of King David. Moreover, she is not just any virgin, but has been purged of all womanliness so that she is fi t to bear Christ.
This process, especially as Ælfric describes it, makes her into a gilt vase, a pure vessel; she is bereft of all humanity. Ælfric’s celebration of Mary venerates the female body as object and place, not person. In its unique development of the character of Eve, Genesis B offers perhaps the most complex model for the interpellation of subjectivities in the corpus of Old English poetry. The poem originated in the strictest Carolingian reform period under Louis the Pious and consequently found a welcome reception during the Anglo-Saxon Benedictine reforms.38 Genesis B performs a gender-based split in subjectivity in its account of the Fall of humanity, effecting a movement away from the personal subject to the corporate for males, and simultaneously stigmatizing the female subject, which becomes associated with personal interests and Satan. The male subject maintains corporate identity, honoring his alliance with God (until his Fall), but Satan and Eve are both concerned with themselves, as is underscored by the repetition of the word “ic” throughout their speeches. While Adam’s selfi sh individual concerns ultimately lead to his downfall, the corporate Christian subject is established through his character at the beginning of the poem and reaffi rmed through his repentance at the end.
The poem thus formalizes the split between personal and corporate selves in order to put forth the ideal model of the generic (male) Christian self. The gendering of the subject made explicit in the poem constructs an abject female, the implications of which resonate far beyond the world of the poem. By her actions, Eve realizes the misogynist perception of the inherently weak, false, intellectually challenged female lurking in the Anglo-Saxon imagination. Ottonian Saxony offers a positive contrast to the starkness of late Anglo-Saxon England. On the continent, cultural diversity and a too quickly expanded realm, coupled with strained resources, ecclesiastical disagreement or uncertainty, and continuing political strife—internal as well as external—provide a much more fl uid and continuously unstable environment.39 The fi nal chapters of the book focus on one brilliant product of the Ottonian renaissance: Hrotsvit von Gandersheim. Selfdescribed as clamor validus Gandeshemensis, “the strong voice of Gandersheim,” Hrotsvit wrote at least eight legends, six dramas, two historical epic poems, and possibly a narrative saint’s life. She is praised as the fi rst known Christian playwright, the fi rst female historian in the West, the fi rst Saxon poet, and even the fi rst feminist, though not all would agree with that last assessment. Reproducing and reiterating categories and issues that defi ne the feminine, Hrotsvit produces viable possibilities for subject formation previously constrained by those categories. Virginity/chastity, vulnerability to rape, sensuality, and beauty are all refocused in Hrotsvit’s specular economy so that, having rescripted and recreated the scene in which physically weak but intellectually complex and competent women triumph over their brutish male opponents, female subjects emerge at the center.
This is not to say that Hrotsvit masters the subject possibilities produced in her texts; for one thing, the process of materialization denies a controlling subject. Nor does she necessarily oppose ecclesiastical reform movements current in her own day. Indeed, some of her texts (the conversio legends of Thais and Mary, for example) seem to support strict active enclosure of women monastics. Moreover, Ottonian Saxony was no feminist utopia; Hrotsvit must reckon with underlying negative perceptions of women that had to have informed her own development as subject. Her writing, while a product of the Ottonian renaissance and the reform movements attached to it, nonetheless tests boundaries and exploits weaknesses inherent in naturalized constructions of gender. Throughout her works, but particularly in her plays, Hrotsvit renders such constructions transparent and humanizes traditionally objectifi ed and allegorized female icons of ecclesiastical literature, redefi ning and reassessing seemingly rigid attitudes and ideals along the way. Her vision of reform includes active female subjects in full voice.
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