Wednesday 12 December 2012, 4.30PM
Speaker(s): Dr Cordula van Wyhe (York)
Sister Margaret was the lay sister of the royal convent of Discalced Carmelite nuns in Brussels from 1607 until her death, probably of spinal tuberculosis, in 1646 at the age of 59. Her spiritual autobiography, authored between 1635-1637, is a unique document in the history of early modern female self-writing in the Low Countries. Her voice is a voice from the bottom of the convent’s hierarchy. Margaret came from a lower middle class family in Brabant, today a region of Belgium. When she entered the convent she spoke only Flemish and her position as lay sister confined her largely to work in the kitchen. Cordula van Wyhe’s talk will discuss how Margaret successfully broke down the social, spatial and linguistic barriers that prevented her from having a voice within the female community of the Brussels convent and patriarchal society at large. She formulated an idiosyncratic yet empowering form of piety in which her working environment of the kitchen, her daily chore of cooking and her experience of chronic disease interlaced into a triad of enormous spiritual force.
Cordula is a lecturer in the History of Art at York. Before joining the History of Art Department at York in 2006, she was the Speelman-Newton Fellow in Netherlandish Art at Wolfson College Cambridge (2000-2005). Her research interests lie in 17th-century Baroque Art with particular reference to the Spanish Netherlands and France. Major interests include the artist Peter Paul Rubens, religious and political imagery, royal patronage, and early modern court culture.
Location: Berrick Saul, room BS/008
Admission: Open to all with an interest
Email: sally.kingsley@york.ac.uk