
The Book of the City of Ladies
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Narrated by:
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Georgina Sutton
About this listen
Shocked and distressed by a male writer's vilification of women, Christine de Pizan has a powerful dreamlike vision in which she is visited by three personified Virtues: Reason, Rectitude and Justice. They tell her she has been chosen to write a book which will be like a city, housing virtuous women and protecting them from feminist attack.
Heroines past and present form the foundations of this city - biblical and mythical heroines, ruling queens, Christian saints, and inventors are among them. Partly myth, partly fact, The Book of the City of Ladies is an extraordinary, pioneering and impassioned defense of women that set out to shatter medieval misogynist cliches, and serve to instill self-worth in its female listeners of the time.
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What listeners say about The Book of the City of Ladies
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- A S
- 01-26-25
Engaging listen, don’t miss the translator’s introduction at the end!
A fascinating rare source of a woman author championing women in Medieval France, performed skillfully by an engaging reader. Gives an excellent sense of the rhetorical turns and everyday misogyny of the period combined with the pervasive Christian moralizing that can be difficult for modern audiences to grasp. I particularly enjoyed the contextualized historiography and highlights throughout the text provided by the translator’s notes in the coda. Required reading!
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- JoAnn
- 03-09-22
The audio really illuminated the ideas for me
I have had a secondhand copy of Christine de Pizan's "The Book of the City of Ladies" for years, but was always intimidated to get started on it, because of the medieval language. The subject matter just felt so daunting and archaic.
This translation, as well as Georgina Sutton's energetic and crisp performance of it, really illuminated the modernity of this 15th century text for me, which include tackling the popular misogynist ideas of the time period in which they were written. Each chapter is a profile of a woman (mythical or real) who illustrates a particular strength (virtue, courage, etc) that serves not only as a foundational brick in building the mythical City of Ladies, but as a counterpoint to the anti-woman bias that pervaded medieval philosophy and culture. It cannot be held to the standard of 21st century feminism standards, but for its 15th century time, it is a radical work. It should be taught in schools!
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6 people found this helpful