<p>Was femininity in early Irish society perceived as weak and sinful innately inferior to masculinity?&nbsp; Was it seen as powerful and dangerous a threat to the peace and tranquility of male society?&nbsp; Or was there a more nuanced view an understanding that femininity or femininities could be presented in a variety of ways according to the pragmatic concerns of the writer?<br />This book examines the sources surviving from fifth- to ninth-century Ireland aiming to offer a fresh view of authorial perceptions of the period.&nbsp; It seeks to highlight the complexities of those perceptions the significance of authorial aims and purposes in the construction of femininity and the potential disjunction between societal &quot;reality&quot; and the images presented to us in the sources.&nbsp; This careful analysis of a broad range of early Irish sources demonstrates how fluid constructions of gender could be and presents a new interpretation of the position of femininity in the thought world of early Irish authors.</p><p>Helen Oxenham worked at the Department of Anglo-Saxon Norse and Celtic in Cambridge as supervisor and researcher on the <em>Mapping Miracles</em> project. She now works for The English Heritage Trust.</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
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