This collection of essays focuses on the questions of women's access to
a written culture and their representation in literature in late
medieval Britain. It explores women's engagement with Anglo-Norman,
English, Welsh and Latin, and addresses such issues as orality and
literacy and women's exclusion from a written tradition. It considers
the historical evidence for women's activity as writers, patrons and
readers, and examines the representation of women within different
literary genres--both secular and religious--their possession or lack of
power, and their roles as lovers, mothers and saints.