Representations of Rape and Consent in Medieval English Laws and Literature
Contributor(s)
Cooper, Mariah L. (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
How did legal, literary, and scientific discourses intersect to define sexual non-consent in the Middle Ages? How did popular cultural assumptions about sexuality and gender influence actual medieval criminal proceedings? And how far have we really come today?
This book explores medieval English understandings of rape, consent, and the assumed mind-body dichotomy of rapists and rape victims. It demonstrates how laws, trial records, popular romance, and ecclesiastic and medical texts defined sexual consent and non-consent, and the consequences of such ideologies. By comparing episodes of rape and consent across diverse primary sources, it considers important medieval English rape myths and victim-blaming stereotypes. Significantly, it also highlights the cultural trepidation associated with believing women’s accusations of rape and questions how much “progress” we have made since then.
Keywords
medieval rape culture; victim blaming; the assaulted body; raptus;DOI
10.2307/jj.21570589ISBN
9781802700534, 9781802702743, 9781802702170Publisher
Arc Humanities PressPublisher website
https://arc-humanities.org/Publication date and place
Leeds, 2024Series
Gender and Power in the Premodern World,Classification
European history: medieval period, middle ages
Legal history
Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval