Table of contents for Listening to Heloise : the voice of a twelfth-century woman / edited by Bonnie Wheeler.
Bibliographic record and links to related information available from the Library of Congress catalog
Information from electronic data provided by the publisher. May be incomplete or contain other coding.
Heloise the Abbess--Mary Martin McLauhglin
Authenticity Revisited--John Marenbon
Philosophical Themes in the Epistolae duorum amantium --Constant J. Mews
The Young Heloise and Latin Rhetoric--John O. Ward and Neville Chiavaroli
Textual Strategies in the Abelard/Heloise Correspondence--Katharina Wilson and Glenda McLeod
Heloise, Dialectic, and the Heroides--Phyllis R. Brown and John C. Peiffer II
Classical Myth and Gender in the Letters of "Abelard" and "Heloise"--Jane Chance
Heloise's Critique of Monastic Life--Linda Georgianna
Female Bodies and Christian Bodies in Heloise’s Third Letter--Peggy McCracken
Rhetorical Engagement and the Benedictine Rite of Initiation in Heloise’s Third Letter--Donna Alfano Bussell
Negotiating Gender and the Religious Life at the Paraclete--Morgan Powell
Heloise and the Question of Consolation--Alcuin Blamires
Heloise and the Question of Friendship--Brian McGuire
The Rhetorical Struggle over the Meaning of Motherhood in the Writings of Heloise and Abelard--Juanita Feros Ruys
Pierre Bayle’s Reflections on a Much Talked About Woman--Deborah Fraoilli
Library of Congress subject headings for this publication: Hâeločise, 1101-1164