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| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Christine de Pisan |
For more information on Christine de Pisan, visit Britannica.com.
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| Biography: Christine de Pisan |
The French author Christine de Pisan C. (c. 1364-ca. 1430) wrote lyric poetry and also prose and verse works on a great variety of philosophical, social, and historical subjects.
Thomas de Pisan, father of Christine de Pisan, was an astrologer and medical doctor in the service of the republic of Venice when he accepted a similar appointment at the court of Charles V of France. Born in Venice, Christine was taken to Paris in 1368, where she was brought up in courtly surroundings and enjoyed a comfortable and studious childhood and adolescence. At 15 she married étienne de Castel. In 1380 Charles V died, thereby dissolving the royal appointment of her father, who died 5 years later. Christine's husband, secretary of Charles VI, died in 1390, leaving her a widow at 25, with three children, considerable debts, and impatient creditors. Two years later Charles VI became insane, leaving the nation open prey.
Impoverished by multiple blows of adversity, Christine determined to earn her living by writing, composing her first ballades in 1393. Her works were successful, and richly illuminated copies of some of them were presented to noted patrons of letters. Thirty major titles followed until she retired to the convent at Poissy, where her only daughter had been a religious for 22 years. She wrote no more except one religious work and a eulogy on Joan of Arc after the victory at Orléans.
In verse, Christine's first work appears to be her Hundred Ballades, followed by 26 virelays, 2 lays, 69 rondeaux, 70 framed poems, 66 more ballades, and 2 complaints. In her Epistle to the God of Love (1399) she begins her battle for feminism, reproaching Ovid and Jean de Meun for their misogyny; a second attack appears in her Tale of the Rose (1402). Of her 15 other long poems the best is the Changes of Fortune (1403), in the 23,636 lines of which she traces changing "fortune" from the time of the Jews down to her own time.
In prose, after her allegorical Epistle from Othea (1400), Christine vigorously continues her feminism in the City of Ladies and the Book of the Three Virtues (both 1405). Other works in prose include the Deeds and Good Morals of WiseKing Charles V (1404), a book on arms and knighthood (1410), and the Book of Peace (1414), which holds up Charles V as a model for the Dauphin. Her Hours of Contemplation on the Passion, containing lessons on patience and humility, was written during her last retreat.
Further Reading
There is little material on Christine de Pisan. A study of her is in Alice Kemp Welch, Of Six Medieval Women (1913). See also Lula McDowell Richardson, The Forerunners of Feminism in French Literature of the Renaissance from Christine of Pisa to Marie de Gournay (1929).
Additional Sources
McLeod, Enid, The Order of the Rose: the life and ideas of Christine de Pizan, Totowa, N.J.: Rowman and Littlefield, 1976 and London: Chatto & Windus, 1976.
Pernoud, Regine, Christine de Pisan, Paris: Calmann-Levy, 1982.
Willard, Charity Cannon, Christine de Pizan: her life and works, New York, N.Y.: Persea Books, 1984.
| French Literature Companion: Christine de Pizan |
Christine de Pizan (sometimes Pisan) (c.1364-c.1431). Poet and scholar. The rapidly proliferating bibliography devoted to Christine, after some centuries of disparagement, is an index of her fascination as a personal and a feminine, indeed a feminist, voice. After a prosperous childhood at the court of the French king Charles V with her father, the court astrologer, and after a happy marriage, she was left a widow in 1390 with her financial affairs embarrassed and with no resource other than her pen. These masculine responsibilities turned her—a revealing metaphor—into a ‘vray homme’, and she became one of the earliest professional femmes de lettres.
Her earliest works consist of lyric poetry— ballades, rondeaux, a virelai—some plainly commissioned, others where one can read a confessional sincerity (‘Seulete suy, et seulete vueil estre | Seulete m'a mon doulz ami laissiee’). The autobiographical should not be exaggerated, however: formally and thematically, the poems use the discourse of desire and loss of the medieval courtly lyric.
Much less conventional is Christine's entry on equal terms into the arena of intellectual debate. Her Epistre au Dieu d'Amours (1399) takes issue with Jean de Meun's misogyny [see Roman de la Rose]; the epistle—her first resort to a device she would often use as a persuasive strategy—instituted a poetic debate, the Querelle des Femmes, in which Christine found powerful allies. The defence of women underlies much of her early work. In Le Livre de la cité des dames (1404-5) she imposes her own thematic and polemical construct, setting exempla drawn largely from Boccaccio in a dream allegory: Raison, Justice, and Droiture enlist her aid in constructing an ideal city as a refuge for unprotected women; the city is peopled by the great women of history and legend who have made positive contributions to civilization. On a more contemporary note, Le Livre des trois vertus or Trésor des dames (1405) is a mirror for women of every class: the same allegorical voices are borrowed to explain women's duties. Christine's insistence on women's dignity and right to a role other than the subservient underpins what are essentially apologias for her sex.
Christine was now ready to move into a less woman-centred sphere. Already in, c.1400 she had produced the Epistre d'Othea, a miroir des princes idiosyncratically employing a fictional correspondance: written in verse and prose, it purports to give the goddess Othea's model advice to the ideal knight Hector of Troy (aged 15), each piece of advice being assigned a moral gloss in Christine's own voice. Le Livre du corps de policie (1404/7), perhaps a pendant to the Livre des trois vertus, is addressed to men, and puts forward moral precepts based on exempla mainly from antiquity. More unusually, Le Livre des fais d'armes et de chevalerie (1410), based primarily on a French translation of Vegetius, instructs the ideal prince in his military duties and strategies.
Christine's growing reputation led to a commission in 1404 to write Le Livre des fais et bonnes meurs du sage roy Charles V, a panegyric partly based on the Grandes Chroniques de France but also incorporating personal details furnished by gens notables at court. By this date her preoccupations seem generally more historical than personal. True, her Livre de la mutacion de fortune (1400-3) hints at an allegorical autobiography, but personal and practical experience serves mainly to apprehend political and social realities, and the work is rather a seven-part universal history. Le Livre du chemin de long estude (1402) is similarly couched in the first person, but narrates an allegorical journey into a world where the Virtues debate the choice of a prince able to save the world from destruction.
Much of Christine's later work, however, focuses directly on the lamentable state of France. Her Lavision Christine (1405) is a complex dream vision interweaving several allegorical threads. Set in a universal history, it diagnoses the moral decay of France. Her Lettre a la reine Isabeau de Baviere (after 1405) appeals to the queen to intercede in the cause of peace. Similar laments preoccupy her Lamentation sur les maux de la guerre civile (1410) and her Epistre de la prison de vie humaine (1416/8); only her Livre de la paix (1412-14) offers the glimmer of a solution: dedicated to Louis de Guyenne, it deplores the weakness of contemporary rulers but hopes to appeal to his sense of responsibility. Fortunately, Christine's last surviving work, the Ditié de Jehanne d'Arc (1429), takes a more hopeful view: God, in the person of the Maid [see Jeanne d'Arc], has brought the sun back to Christine's life, triumphantly vindicating the woman warrior: ‘Hee! quel honneur au femenin sexe!’
Christine's œuvre, then, is remarkably varied. Almost more than her preoccupation with the cause of women, her engagement with contemporary politics is a constant. Her voice is a scholar's, with a striking skill in deploying learned quotation. Her lyric writing has fluency and pathos; her prose is experimental, with a supple if sometimes convoluted Latinate syntax which puts her at the forefront of contemporary stylists.
[Jane Taylor]
Bibliography
| Philosophy Dictionary: Christine de Pizan |
(1365-c. 1430) Venetianborn poet, political theorist, and advocate for women, and probably the first European woman known to have made a living by writing. Her verse, Letters on the Romance of the Rose attacked Jean de Meung's popular The Romance of the Rose as immoral and misogynistic. Her City of Ladies (1405) describes a utopian city for women inhabited by powerful, educated, and influential women both of antiquity and of her own time.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Christine de Pisan |
| Wikipedia: Christine de Pizan |
Christine de Pizan (also seen as de Pisan) (1363–c.1434) was a Venetian-born woman of the medieval era who strongly challenged misogyny and stereotypes prevalent in the male-dominated realm of the arts. As a poet, she was well-known and highly regarded in her own day.
She spent most of her childhood and all of her adult life primarily in France and then the abbey at Poissy, and wrote entirely in her adoptive tongue of Middle French. Her early courtly poetry is marked by her knowledge of aristocratic custom and fashion of the day, particularly involving women and the practice of chivalry; her early and later allegorical and didactic treatises reflect both autobiographical information about her life and views and also her own individualized and protofeminist approach to the scholastic learned tradition of mythology, legend, and history she inherited from clerical scholars and to the genres and courtly or scholastic subjects of contemporary French and Italian poets she admired. Supported and encouraged by important royal French and English patrons, Christine had a profound influence on fifteenth-century English poetry. Christine completed forty-one pieces during her thirty-year career (1399–1429). She earned her accolade as Europe’s first professional woman writer.[1] Her success stems from a wide range of innovative writing and rhetorical techniques that critically challenged renowned male writers, such as Jean de Meun who, to Christine’s dismay, incorporated misogynist beliefs within their literary works. She married in 1380, at the age of 15.
In recent decades, Christine's work has been returned to prominence by the efforts of scholars such as Charity Cannon Willard, Earl Jeffrey Richards and Simone de Beauvoir. Certain scholars have argued that she should be seen as an early feminist who efficiently used language to convey that women could play an important role within society. This characterization has been challenged by other critics who claim either that it is an anachronistic use of the word, or that her beliefs were not progressive enough to merit such a designation.[2]
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Christine de Pizan was born in 1364 in Venice. She was the daughter of Tommaso di Benvenuto da Pizzano (Thomas de Pizan; named for the family's origins in the town of Pizzano, south east of Bologna), a physician, court astrologer, and Councillor of the Republic of Venice.[3] Following Christine’s birth, Thomas de Pizan accepted an appointment to the court of Charles V of France, as the king’s astrologer, alchemist, and physician. In this atmosphere, Christine was able to pursue her intellectual interests. She successfully educated herself by immersing herself in languages, in the rediscovered classics and humanism of the early Renaissance, and in Charles V’s royal archive that housed a vast number of manuscripts. Pizan did not assert her intellectual abilities, or establish her authority as a writer until she was widowed at the age of twenty-four.[4]
Christine de Pizan married Etienne du Castel, a royal secretary to the court, at the age of fifteen. She bore three children, a daughter (who went to live at the Dominican Abbey in Poissy in 1397 as a companion to the king's daughter, Marie), a son Jean, and another child who died in childhood.[5] Christine’s familial life was threatened in 1390 when her husband, while in Beauvais on a mission with the king, suddenly died in an epidemic.[6] Following Castel’s death, Christine was left to support her mother, a niece, and her three children.[7] When she tried to collect money from her husband’s estate, she faced complicated lawsuits regarding the recovery of salary due to her husband.[6] In order to support herself and her family, Christine turned to writing. By 1393, she was writing love ballads, which caught the attention of wealthy patrons within the court. These patrons were intrigued by the novelty of a female writer and had her compose texts about their romantic exploits.[8] Christine's output during this period was prolific. Between 1393 and 1412, she composed over three hundred ballads, and many more shorter poems.
Christine de Pizan’s participation in a literary quarrel, in 1401–1402, allowed her to move beyond the courtly circles, and ultimately to establish her status as a writer concerned with the position of women in society. During these years, she involved herself in a renowned literary debate, the “Querelle du Roman de la Rose”.[9] Christine helped to instigate this debate by beginning to question the literary merits of Jean de Meun’s the Romance of the Rose. Written in the thirteenth century, the Romance of the Rose satirizes the conventions of courtly love while critically depicting women as nothing more than seducers. Christine specifically objected to the use of vulgar terms in Jean de Meun’s allegorical poem. She argued that these terms denigrated the proper and natural function of sexuality, and that such language was inappropriate for female characters such as Madame Raison. According to Christine, noble women did not use such language.[10] Her critique primarily stems from her belief that Jean de Meun was purposely slandering women through the debated text.
The debate itself is extensive and at its end, the principal issue was no longer Jean de Meun’s literary capabilities. The principal issue had shifted to the unjust slander of women within literary texts. This dispute helped to establish Christine’s reputation as a female intellectual who could assert herself effectively and defend her claims in the male-dominated literary realm. Christine continued to counter abusive literary treatments of women.
By 1405, Christine de Pizan had completed her most successful literary works, The Book of the City of Ladies and The Treasure of the City of Ladies, or The Book of the Three Virtues. The first of these shows the importance of women’s past contributions to society, and the second strives to teach women of all estates how to cultivate useful qualities in order to counteract the growth of misogyny (Willard 1984:135).
Christine’s final work was a poem eulogizing Joan of Arc, the peasant girl who took a very public role in organizing French military resistance to English domination in the early fifteenth century. Written in 1429, The Tale of Joan of Arc celebrates the appearance of a woman military leader who, according to Christine, vindicated and rewarded all women’s efforts to defend their own sex (Willard 1984:205). After completing this particular poem, it seems that Christine, at the age of sixty-five, decided to end her literary career (Willard 1984:207). The exact date of her death is unknown. However, her death did not diminish appreciation for her renowned literary works. Instead, her legacy continued on because of the voice she established as an authoritative rhetorician.
In the “Querelle du Roman de la Rose,” Christine responded to Jean de Montreuil, who had written her a treatise defending the misogynist sentiments in the Romance of the Rose. She begins by claiming that her opponent was an “expert in rhetoric” as compared to herself “a woman ignorant of subtle understanding and agile sentiment.” In this particular apologetic response, Christine belittles her own style. She is employing a rhetorical strategy by writing against the grain of her meaning, also known as antiphrasis (Redfern 80). Her ability to employ rhetorical strategies continued when Christine began to compose literary texts following the “Querelle du Roman de la Rose.”
In The Book of the City of Ladies Christine de Pizan created a symbolic city in which women are appreciated and defended. Christine, having no female literary tradition to call upon, constructs three allegorical foremothers: Reason, Justice, and Rectitude. She enters into a dialogue, a movement between question and answer, with these allegorical figures that is from a completely female perspective (Campbell 6). These constructed women lift Christine up from her despair over the misogyny prevalent in her time. Together, they create a forum to speak on issues of consequence to all women. Only female voices, examples and opinions provide evidence within this text. Christine, through Lady Reason in particular, argues that stereotypes of woman can be sustained only if women are prevented from entering the dominant male-oriented conversation (Campbell 7). Overall, Christine hoped to establish truths about women that contradicted the negative stereotypes that she had identified in previous literature. She did this successfully by creating literary foremothers that helped her to formulate a female dialogue that celebrated women and their accomplishments.
In The Treasure of the City of Ladies Christine highlights the persuasive effect of women’s speech and actions in everyday life. In this particular text, Christine argues that women must recognize and promote their ability to make peace. This ability will allow women to mediate between husband and subjects. She also claims that slanderous speech erodes one’s honor and threatens the sisterly bond among women. Christine then argues that "skill in discourse should be a part of every woman’s moral repertoire" (Redfern 87). Christine understood that a woman’s influence is realized when her speech accords value to chastity, virtue, and restraint. She proved that rhetoric is a powerful tool that women could employ to settle differences and to assert themselves. Overall, she presented a concrete strategy that allowed all women, regardless of their status, to undermine the dominant patriarchal discourse.
Christine specifically sought out other women to collaborate in the creation of her work. She makes special mention of a manuscript illuminator we know only as Anastasia who she described as the most talented of her day.[11]
Christine de Pizan contributed to the rhetorical tradition by counteracting the contemporary discourse. Rhetorical scholars have studied her's persuasive strategies. It has been concluded that Christine successfully forged a rhetorical identity for herself, and encouraged women to embrace this identity by counteracting misogynist thinking through persuasive dialogue.[12] Simone de Beauvoir wrote in 1949 that Épître au Dieu d'Amour was "the first time we see a woman take up her pen in defense of her sex" making Christine de Pizan perhaps the West's first feminist, or protofeminist as some scholars prefer to say.[13][14]
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