This might be nice reading for a weekend afternoon just after Easter. It's about Lindisfarne, and mortality, and ordinary remains.
open.substack.com/pub/lucyalle...
Posts by Lucy Allen-Goss
🎙️ Nina Doyle (Féileacáin) spoke with Sally-Ann Barrett on Midlands 103 Saturday Focus about the need for statutory paid leave for pregnancy loss <23 weeks & a proposed certificate of pregnancy loss for Ireland (01:17-16:06)
🔗 www.midlands103.com/podcasts/sat...
Ping #PLRG_PLACESproject
I love that. One of my 'small victories' with my DD is that if I say 'do you know something?' she rolls her eyes and replies 'yes. You love me!' To me that's a victory because I didn't grow up with that security. I like that she can pretend it's oh-so-boring. (And she says it back, too.😅)
❤️ Thank you!
Thanks for the repost, @akennedysmith.bsky.social!
Medieval medicine, very recent scientific findings, and maybe a snippet of a new reading of six-hundred-year-old poem. lucyallengoss.substack.com/p/medieval-m...
Thank you, Mathew, so much!
I'm writing about pearls and lapidary medicine, and a couple of things that I think are actually, possibly, new news about the medieval poem Pearl and its context. lucyallengoss.substack.com/p/medieval-m...
Pulling on the Threads of History: Writing 'Good' and 'Bad' Tudors
open.substack.com/pub/lucyalle...
YES!
It’s so common to come across the assertion that books were luxury objects exclusively for the elite in the Middle Ages that I want to guest curate a massive exhibition called “Meh-nuscripts: Books for the Many,” which features just workaday or unremarkable objects.
Did you know that in 1633, a woman called Catherine Tuggy had a plant nursery getting rave reviews, on the site of an old monastic garden in Westminster? Women belong in horticulture. lucyallengoss.substack.com/p/catherine-...
Thank you! Much appreciated. I know they had land (annoyingly referred to both as 'pasture' and 'garden' and so had the space to keep cattle ... but of course, whether they did anything with the hides themselves is another matter. And yes, I'm well thanks! Hope you are too.
(Incidentally, while entertaining very preliminary thoughts about this I came across your submerged graphosphere project, and it looks *amazing*!)
@drdavidrundle.bsky.social Hello! This is a niche question but I am sure you will know - do we have evidence for the monks of Westminster making their own parchment in the fifteenth/early sixteenth centuries? (I have a convoluted interest in cows pastured on Long Acre!) Would love your expertise!
Oh, thank you, you are kind! I ought to get my university of York access to thing like this sorted out (I have a bad habit of letting it lapse).
Oh, you are a star! (I don't have subscription).
Anyone know the etymology of the colour/dye word 'gingeline'? I wondered if, like 'grideline' it comes from a corruption of 'de line' (flax). I am loving this quotation about 'silk grogans, satins, velvet fine/ The rosy-colour'd carnadine/ Your nutmeg hue, or gingerline/ Cloth of tissue or tabine'.
Look what arrived today, or at least the ebook did. This is the first encyclopedia devoted exclusively to medieval women’s writing globally,focusing on the thousand-year period between 500-1500. Entries on about 250 women writers plus longer thematic essays. You’re welcome.
I'm really proud of this post (so I am correspondingly nervous about sharing it). In it, I'm arguing against the narrative of grief as 'love with no place to go,' which I think is damaging and dismissive.
lucyallengoss.substack.com/p/stob-fobbi...
Wonderful news from Birkbeck's School of Historical Studies. We're hiring not one but TWO open-ended, full-time roles: Medieval Studies, and History of Art! cis7.bbk.ac.uk/home.html#fi...
Check out the CFP for the Gender & Medieval Studies conference in Oxford in Sept! Theme is ✨GENDER & CREATIVITY✨ Conf generously support by University College, Oxford; the John Fell Fund (Oxford University); the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship; the GMS group; & @guildmedmak.bsky.social
Very saddened by the death of Deborah Cameron this week—a brilliant linguist, feminist, and colleague, who shone bright light on language and gender in society.
Here she is talking about why people are interested in linguistic differences between men and women:
englishandmedia.co.uk/videos/colle...
Yes, I found this bit of her argument so powerful! She captures exactly what it's like to be constantly chipped away at by people who can only imagine one kind of 'correct' way to be struggling or in need.
It's an amazing book.
Such a lovely surprise. Lucy's reading is so perceptive and thoughtful - honestly, if no one ever reads or reviews All My Worldly Joy again, I will be happy with this!
This is going to be wonderful!
I am, on reflection, genuinely stunned that Jonathan Bate got away with writing a review of Hamnet that basically concludes with 'she should have written the book *I* wanted to read' and 'if only she'd thought of making the main character a man!' Thoughts:
lucyallengoss.substack.com/p/when-women...
If you are in #NYC next week, come to “Weaving Dreams/#Quilting Community” a panel discussion-sewing demo featuring textile artists/writers/organizers who have inspired me. You’ll get swag to embellish!! #quiltsky #Artsky #Blacksky Pls register by 1/27!
www.eventbrite.com/e/weaving-dr...