The Old Woman in the Cave of Lust: Edmund Spenser's Silenced Feminine Voices in The Faerie Queene

Edmund Spenser’s epic Arthurian-centric poem The Faerie Queene (1590, 1596) is permeated by fairy tales and old wives’ tales, but the very presence of the tales and their tellers is problematic, as these feminine voices are often included only to be silenced (Miller 6). Spenser’s anxiety of female v...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Colleen E. Kennedy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2009-12-01
Series:Forum
Online Access:http://www.forumjournal.org/article/view/627
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spelling doaj-e8f94b86b4114258ac850da98197a5ad2020-11-25T03:32:46ZengUniversity of EdinburghForum1749-97712009-12-0109627The Old Woman in the Cave of Lust: Edmund Spenser's Silenced Feminine Voices in The Faerie QueeneColleen E. Kennedy0Ohio State UniversityEdmund Spenser’s epic Arthurian-centric poem The Faerie Queene (1590, 1596) is permeated by fairy tales and old wives’ tales, but the very presence of the tales and their tellers is problematic, as these feminine voices are often included only to be silenced (Miller 6). Spenser’s anxiety of female voices, narratives, sources, and genres, becomes manifested in one very complicated and often overlooked character: the Old Woman in the Cave of Lust. This Old Woman is only found in one canto of Spenser’s epic poem (IV.vii) and is denied a voice; she isn’t given one line of dialogue. The very fact that this Old Woman emerges into the text, is ambiguously portrayed, temporarily vilified, and then retreats from the text unscathed demonstrates the power of the female voice in Spenser’s text.http://www.forumjournal.org/article/view/627
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Colleen E. Kennedy
spellingShingle Colleen E. Kennedy
The Old Woman in the Cave of Lust: Edmund Spenser's Silenced Feminine Voices in The Faerie Queene
Forum
author_facet Colleen E. Kennedy
author_sort Colleen E. Kennedy
title The Old Woman in the Cave of Lust: Edmund Spenser's Silenced Feminine Voices in The Faerie Queene
title_short The Old Woman in the Cave of Lust: Edmund Spenser's Silenced Feminine Voices in The Faerie Queene
title_full The Old Woman in the Cave of Lust: Edmund Spenser's Silenced Feminine Voices in The Faerie Queene
title_fullStr The Old Woman in the Cave of Lust: Edmund Spenser's Silenced Feminine Voices in The Faerie Queene
title_full_unstemmed The Old Woman in the Cave of Lust: Edmund Spenser's Silenced Feminine Voices in The Faerie Queene
title_sort old woman in the cave of lust: edmund spenser's silenced feminine voices in the faerie queene
publisher University of Edinburgh
series Forum
issn 1749-9771
publishDate 2009-12-01
description Edmund Spenser’s epic Arthurian-centric poem The Faerie Queene (1590, 1596) is permeated by fairy tales and old wives’ tales, but the very presence of the tales and their tellers is problematic, as these feminine voices are often included only to be silenced (Miller 6). Spenser’s anxiety of female voices, narratives, sources, and genres, becomes manifested in one very complicated and often overlooked character: the Old Woman in the Cave of Lust. This Old Woman is only found in one canto of Spenser’s epic poem (IV.vii) and is denied a voice; she isn’t given one line of dialogue. The very fact that this Old Woman emerges into the text, is ambiguously portrayed, temporarily vilified, and then retreats from the text unscathed demonstrates the power of the female voice in Spenser’s text.
url http://www.forumjournal.org/article/view/627
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