Female body—male body: The valiant Hungarian women of Eger and Szigetvár from the 16th century in historiography, literature, and art

The question of whether the characteristics of the genders are determined by anatomical, biological, or physiological factors or influenced by society and culture (or perhaps a mixture of the two), in other words whether the masculine and feminine personality traits are inherent or they are shaped b...

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Main Author: Julia Papp
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2016-12-01
Series:Cogent Arts & Humanities
Subjects:
art
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311983.2016.1147403
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spelling doaj-b4e822564a194d709cc5bdc27610f9172021-02-09T09:19:15ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Arts & Humanities2331-19832016-12-013110.1080/23311983.2016.11474031147403Female body—male body: The valiant Hungarian women of Eger and Szigetvár from the 16th century in historiography, literature, and artJulia Papp0Institute for Art HistoryThe question of whether the characteristics of the genders are determined by anatomical, biological, or physiological factors or influenced by society and culture (or perhaps a mixture of the two), in other words whether the masculine and feminine personality traits are inherent or they are shaped by our education and the expectations of our society, is still debated in psychology, sociology, anthropology or, for example, among the researchers of the anatomy of the male and female brains. Throughout history, the theological, philosophical, and historiographical schools had different beliefs about whether the differences or the similarities between the genders are more significant. Both sides used biblical (Old Testament) texts to prove their opinion: that Eve was made from Adam’s rib is proof of the secondary role of women, however, the fact that humans (both male and female) were created in the image and likeness of God means that they are inherently equal. The egalitarian philosophy of the Age of Enlightenment also denied the psychological differences between men and women, claiming that the soul has no gender.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311983.2016.1147403warrior womanhungary16th centuryrole reversalgender studieshistoriographyliteratureart
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julia Papp
spellingShingle Julia Papp
Female body—male body: The valiant Hungarian women of Eger and Szigetvár from the 16th century in historiography, literature, and art
Cogent Arts & Humanities
warrior woman
hungary
16th century
role reversal
gender studies
historiography
literature
art
author_facet Julia Papp
author_sort Julia Papp
title Female body—male body: The valiant Hungarian women of Eger and Szigetvár from the 16th century in historiography, literature, and art
title_short Female body—male body: The valiant Hungarian women of Eger and Szigetvár from the 16th century in historiography, literature, and art
title_full Female body—male body: The valiant Hungarian women of Eger and Szigetvár from the 16th century in historiography, literature, and art
title_fullStr Female body—male body: The valiant Hungarian women of Eger and Szigetvár from the 16th century in historiography, literature, and art
title_full_unstemmed Female body—male body: The valiant Hungarian women of Eger and Szigetvár from the 16th century in historiography, literature, and art
title_sort female body—male body: the valiant hungarian women of eger and szigetvár from the 16th century in historiography, literature, and art
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Arts & Humanities
issn 2331-1983
publishDate 2016-12-01
description The question of whether the characteristics of the genders are determined by anatomical, biological, or physiological factors or influenced by society and culture (or perhaps a mixture of the two), in other words whether the masculine and feminine personality traits are inherent or they are shaped by our education and the expectations of our society, is still debated in psychology, sociology, anthropology or, for example, among the researchers of the anatomy of the male and female brains. Throughout history, the theological, philosophical, and historiographical schools had different beliefs about whether the differences or the similarities between the genders are more significant. Both sides used biblical (Old Testament) texts to prove their opinion: that Eve was made from Adam’s rib is proof of the secondary role of women, however, the fact that humans (both male and female) were created in the image and likeness of God means that they are inherently equal. The egalitarian philosophy of the Age of Enlightenment also denied the psychological differences between men and women, claiming that the soul has no gender.
topic warrior woman
hungary
16th century
role reversal
gender studies
historiography
literature
art
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311983.2016.1147403
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