Volume 10, Issue 3, October 1997

The enthusiastic reception which has greeted the resdiscovery of the writings of Julian of Norwich and Hildegard of Bingen has been attributed to the explicitly feminine nature of their works. This article explores why the writings of these women can be considered feminine and argues coexisting models of the divine are not only possible but necessary for an understanding of a God who is not unidimensional.
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