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Book Review

Volume 106 • Number 3

July 2007



 


The Representation of Women's Emotions in Medieval and Early Modern Culture. Edited by Lisa Perfetti. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2005. Pp. i­viii + 222. $65.

While completing her book Women and Laughter (2003), Lisa Perfetti noticed that lament and laughter shared common features, and she therefore envisioned a broader study of women's emotions. Her introduction to the work at hand not only provides the customary synopsis of the eight essays that follow, but as an essay in its own right, it outlines problems that in her view should be covered in this, the first exploration of women's emotions in medieval and early modern times. These include the relationship between emotions and the body, with class and ethnicity, their influence on behavior and community, and finally, women's understanding and use of their own emotions. The introduction thus provides suggestions for further research. Perfetti's guiding hand is not only evident in the chronological, geographic, and thematic choice of subjects but also in the fact that half of the authors thank her specifically for help and insight. (p. 6).

Jenny Jochens
Baltimore, Maryland

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