In this Book

Negotiating Childlessness in the Middle Ages: Stories of Desired, Refused, and Regretted Parenthood

Book
2025
Published by: Arc Humanities Press
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summary

This book examines the ways in which people wrote about and engaged with infertility in the German Middle Ages. Striking differences emerge across the vernacular stories, legends, and romances concerned. For some, childlessness is a huge problem, for others, a high ideal. Regina Toepfer considers the reasons for these differences, and how ideas changed over the period, revealing different narrative patterns that shape stories of childlessness right up to the present day.

These range from the late fulfilment of the longing to have children, assisted by divine or demonic help; through social and religious alternatives to parenthood; to the conscious decision to remain childless and achieve happiness through partnership alone. Bringing German source material to an English readership for the first time, this book provides fresh insights on childlessness that engage with current debates about sperm donation, adoption, and being childfree.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page, Copyright

pp. ii-iii

List of Illustrations

pp. v

Acknowledgements

pp. vi

Introduction

pp. 1-11

Chapter 1. Divine Help: Waiting for a Child

pp. 13-39

Chapter 2. Dangerous Third Parties: A Child at Any Price

pp. 41-67

Chapter 3. Social Alternatives: Taking in a Child

pp. 69-100

Chapter 4. Mystical Motherhood: Venerating the Child

pp. 101-124

Chapter 5. Forced Parenthood: Regretting a Child

pp. 125-149

Chapter 6. Chaste Marriage: Not Wanting a Child

pp. 151-178

Chapter 7. Courtly Love: Happiness Regardless of Children

pp. 179-204

Epilogue

pp. 205-209

Bibliography

pp. 211-224

Index of Personal Names

pp. 225-230
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