The Paston letters viewed in the context of medieval women's writing and
medieval letter writing.
The Paston letters form one of only two surviving collections of
fifteenth-century correspondence, in their case especially rich in
letters from the women of the family. Clandestine love affairs, secret
marriages, violent family rows, bickering with neighbours, battles and
sieges, threats of murder and kidnapping, fears of plague: these are
just some of the topics discussed in the letters of the Paston women.
Diane Watt's introduction seeks to place these letters in the context of
medieval women's writing and and medieval letter writing. Her
interpretive essay reconstructs the lives of these women by examining
what the letters reveal about women's literacy and education, lifein the
medieval household, religion and piety, health and medicine, and love,
marriage, family relationships, and female friendships in the middle
ages.
Professor Diane Watt is Head of the School of English and Languages,
University of Surrey.