UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Gender and gender identity may seem like more recent headline-grabbing topics, but societies have discussed the subjects for centuries. A new approach to reading a medieval French narrative text suggests that gender identity 600 years ago was just as complex as it is today, according to a Penn State researcher.
“Gender diversity is not a new concept,” said Brooke Findley, associate professor of French and women’s, gender and sexuality studies at Penn State Altoona, who authored the study. “The understanding that gender is different from biological sex, and that it doesn’t always fit easily into a binary, has been with us throughout human history across diverse cultures and time periods. And gender looks different than we would expect at different times in history. We have to approach medieval texts keeping in mind that our current assumptions about gender won’t necessarily hold true in that context.”
In the current study, published in Medieval Feminist Forum: A Journal of Gender and Sexuality, Findley examined Heart of Steel, a character in the 15th century French romance “Perceforest.” The work’s use of both masculine and feminine pronouns to refer to the character, and the difficulties that Heart of Steel encounters when trying to explain their gender to others, suggest that the character may be best understood as not easily fitting into a male-female gender binary. The character’s struggle to define their gender and have it be accepted by others resembles challenges faced by the LGBTQ+ community today, according to Findley.
“Especially right now, when we’re seeing a lot of anti-trans legislation in the U.S., I think there’s sometimes the assumption that being trans is something new, or that it’s a fad,” Findley said. “In fact, trans and nonbinary people have existed throughout history. The stories are everywhere once you start looking for them.”
Medieval scholars use the term “romance” to describe a secular narrative written in the common language and meant for popular consumption, Findley explained. Although composed in French, likely in the area of modern-day Burgundy, the six-book-long romance “Perceforest” draws on Celtic myth and takes place in pre-Arthurian Britain.