Christine de Pizan (1364-1431) has been recognised as a poet, early
humanist and feminist precursor but rarely as political theorist
whose works were intended to have a direct impact on the tumultuous
politics of her time. The essays in this collection focus on
Christine as a political writer and provide an important resource
for those wishing to understand her political thought. They locate
her political writing in the late medieval tradition, discussing
her indebtedness to Aristotle, Aquinas and Augustine as well as her
transformations of their thought. They also illuminate
Christine’s ‘political epistemology’ her
understanding of political wisdom as a part of theology, the
knowledge of God. New light is thrown on the circumstances which
prompted Christine to write on political issues and on her attitude
to Isabeau of Bavaria. These essays show that Christine’s
originality consisted in her capacity to modify and feminise the
tradition of Christian Aristotelianism through the use of elements
of Christian imagery, in particular Mariology, in order to
construct an image of the virtuous and prudent monarch which had
lost the explicitly manly and warlike character of the Aristotelian
phronimos. This reconfigured image of the monarch lent
itself to the extension which she developed in her more feminist
works, which demonstrated the prudence of women and their capacity,
in times of need, to function as authoritative political
figures.
"If the true mark of excellence for a critical work lies in its ability to make us return to the original sources, this collection of essays excels indeed. The insights and perspectives of Healing the Body Politic will lead many to reread Christine de Pizan with a new appreciation for her original and subtle mind." (A. Williams Lewin, in: The Medieval Review, 07.09.17)