New on Pre-Pub

RRD
RRD Member Posts: 311 ✭✭
edited November 2024 in English Forum

The third and final volume of a series The Concept of Woman by Prudence Allen is new on pre-pub.

https://www.logos.com/product/145182/the-concept-of-woman-volume-iii-the-search-for-communion-of-persons-1500-2015 

The first two volumes are already available in Logos. I have just begun reading Vol.1 https://www.logos.com/product/50027/the-concept-of-woman-vol-1-the-aristotelian-revolution 

From Volume 1:

A CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE OF THE PHILOSOPHERS CONSIDERED


Hesiod
  c. 750 BC
Sappho
  c. 600 BC
Anaximander
  c. 540 BC
Pythagoras
  c. 530 BC
Heraclitus
  c. 540–480 BC
Parmenides
  c. 539–500 BC
Anaxagoras
  c. 500–428 BC
Empedocles
  c. 450 BC
Aspasia
  c. 440 BC
Protagoras
  c. 490–420 BC
Gorgias
  c. 490–386 BC
Prodicus
  c. 470–3?? BC
Hippocrates
  c. 460–377 BC
Democritus
  c. 460–370 BC
Socrates
  c. 470–399 BC
Xenophon
  c. 430–357 BC
Plato
  c. 428–355 BC
Speussipus
  c. 410–339 BC
Perictione I
  fourth century BC
Theano I
  fourth century BC
Phyntis
  fourth century BC
Aristotle
  384–322 BC
Hipparchia
  c. 300 BC
Theophrastus
  c. 370–286 BC
Epicurus
  c. 341–270 BC
Zeno of Cittium
  c. 333–261 BC
Chryssipus
  c. 282–206 BC
Melissa
  third century BC
Perictione II
  third century BC
Aresas
  third century BC
Myia
  second century BC
Theano II
  second century BC
Cicero
  106–43 BC
Lucretius
  98–55 BC
Philo
  13 BC–AD 54
Seneca
  AD 4–64
Pliny the Elder
  AD 23–79
Musonius Rufus
  c. AD 30–101
Epictetus
  born c. 50
Plutarch
  50–125
Juvenal
  60–140
Marcus Aurelius
  121–180
Galen
  131–201
Plotinus
  205–270
Porphyry
  235–305
St. Catherine of Alexandria
  c. 307
St. Augustine
  354–430
Hypatia
  370–415
Boethius
  480–524
Hilda of Whitby
  614–680
John Scotus Erigena
  810–877
Roswitha
  c. 935–1002
Avicenna
  980–1037
Avicebron
  1020–1070
St. Anselm
  1033–1109
Abelard
  1097–1142
Hildegard of Bingen
  1098–1179
Peter Lombard
  1100–1160
Heloise
  1101–1164
Averroes
  1126–1198
Herrad of Landsberg
  1130–1195
Maimonides
  1135–1204
Walter Map
  c. 1140–1209
Andreas Capellanus
  c. 1186
St. Albert the Great
  1193–1280
Roger Bacon
  1214–1292
St. Bonaventure
  1217–1274
St. Thomas Aquinas
  1224–1274


Allen, P. (1997). The Concept of Woman: The Aristotelian Revolution 750 B.C.–A.D. 1250 (Second Edition, p. xv). Grand Rapids, MI; Cambridge, U.K.: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.

Comments

  • RRD
    RRD Member Posts: 311 ✭✭

    From Volume 2 - https://www.logos.com/product/50028/the-concept-of-woman-vol-2-the-early-humanist-reformation-parts-1-and-2 

        CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE OF AUTHORS AND TEXTS CONSIDERED IN VOLUME II


    Robert Grosseteste
    1175–1253
    Vincent of Beauvais
    1190–1264
    St. Albert the Great
    1193–1280
    Beatrice of Nazareth
    1205–1286
    Hadewijch
    thirteenth century
    Mechtild of Magdeburg
    1212–1298
    Roger Bacon
    1214–1292
    St. Thomas Aquinas
    1224–1274
    [Guillaume de Lorris and Jean de Meun]
      Le Roman de la rose
    1225–1278
    [Mahieu le Bigame and Jean le Fèvre]
      Le Livre de Mathéolus
    c. 1300
    Marguerite Porete
    died 1310
    Meister Eckhart
    1235–1302
    Mechtild of Hackeborn
    1241–1298
    Giles of Rome
    1243–1316
    Guido Cavalcanti
    1255–1300
    St. Gertrude the Great
    1256–1302
    Francesco Barberino
    1264–1348
    John Duns Scotus
    1265–1308
    Dante Alighieri
    1265–1321
    William of Ockham
    1280–1349
      Frau Welt
    c. 1285
      La Contenance des fames
    1275–1330
      Le Blasme des fames
    1275–1330
    Henry Suso
    1295–1363
    Johannes Tauler
    1300–1361
    St. Bridget of Sweden
    1303–1373
    Francis Petrarch
    1304–1374
    Giovanni Boccaccio
    1313–1375
    Julian of Norwich
    1343–c. 1416
      p xv  St. Catherine of Siena
    1347–1380
    Christine de Pizan
    1363–1431
    Leonardo Bruni d’Arezzo
    1369–1444
    Margery Kempe
    1373–c. 1438
    Guarino of Verona
    1374–1460
    Vittorino of Feltre
    1378–1446
    [Eustache Deschamps]
      Le Miroir de mariage
    c. 1381–1420
    Francesco Barbaro
    1390–1454
    Nicholas of Cusa
    1401–1464
    Leon Battista Alberti
    1404–1472
    Lorenzo Valla
    1406–1457
    St. Joan of Arc
    1412–1431
    Isotta Nogarola
    1418–1466
    Albrecht von Eyb
    1420–1466
    Marsilio Ficino
    1433–1499
    [Heinrich Kramer and James Sprenger]
      The Malleus maleficarum
    1448
    [Antoine de la Sale]
      Les Quinze joies de mariage
    mid-fifteenth century
    Giovanni Pico Mirandola
    1463–1494
    Laura Cereta
    1469–1499
      Evangile aux femmes
    c. 1490


    Allen, P. (2002). The Concept of Woman: The Early Humanist Reformation 1250-1500 (Vol. II, pp. xiv–xv). Grand Rapids, MI; Cambridge, U.K.: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.

  • RRD
    RRD Member Posts: 311 ✭✭

    Bump!

  • DMB
    DMB Member Posts: 14,635 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Thank you, Roger. I hadn't realized women were a concept. :)

    Today, I'll have to take a look.

    "If myth is ideology in narrative form, then scholarship is myth with footnotes." B. Lincolm 1999.

  • RRD
    RRD Member Posts: 311 ✭✭

    This series fits perfectly with Women's History Month.

  • Dan Francis
    Dan Francis Member Posts: 5,336 ✭✭✭

    Denise said:

    I hadn't realized women were a concept. :)

    They don't exist in Christ there is no male no female. LOL

    -dan