Rape, Rapture, and Writing  The Book of Margery Kempe

Friday, December 3, 2021 - 12:00pm
Maginnes Hall 102 or Hybrid
Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Faculty Research Forum
 
Rape, Rapture, and Writing The Book of Margery Kempe 
 
Suzanne Edwards
Associate Professor, English Department 
 
For many contemporary survivors of sexual violence, writing is an integral part of survival and healing—as in works by Sohaila Abdulali (2018), Roxane Gay (2017), and Seo-Young Chu (2017).  Characteristically, these narratives depart from the conventions that define sexual violence in dominant discourses. Philosopher and rape survivor Susan Brison explains that play with the past through recursive, non-linear, and/or allusive narratives can promote healing from sexual violence, because it allows the survivor to open up “an infinitevariety of unforeseeable futures.” This paper argues for reading the fifteenth-century Book of Margery Kempe as another such narrative of rape and recovery, as a record Kempe’s ongoing efforts to rework a history of sexual trauma into an otherwise “unforeseeable future.”  
 
 
Lunch to go provided with an R.S.V.P. by Wednesday, December 1 - Jen Reider, jrc519@lehigh.edu

 

Department: 

Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies

End Date: 

Wednesday, November 17, 2021 - 12:00pm