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Sara Petrosillo, "Hawking Women: Falconry, Gender, and Control in Medieval Literary Culture" (Ohio State UP, 2023)

Jan 19, 2026
Sara Petrosillo, an assistant professor at the University of Evansville and author of *Hawking Women*, dives into the fascinating intersection of falconry and medieval gender studies. She reveals how women in the Middle Ages embraced the image of the hawking woman, challenging patriarchal narratives. The conversation explores the cultural significance of falconry in literature, the intimate link between female hawks and female empowerment, and the ways women practiced and enjoyed this art. Petrosillo even shares her experiences in modern falconry, bringing a unique personal touch to her insights.
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INSIGHT

Falconry As A Literary Lens

  • Falconry metaphors mapped onto poetry and gender, offering a persistent interpretive frame in medieval culture.
  • Sara Petrosillo argues these metaphors reveal complex relations between training, control, and literary form.
INSIGHT

Frederick II Systematized Falconry

  • Frederick II elevated falconry from practical craft to an articulated art with step-by-step training described for posterity.
  • His Liberta Arti Venandi Cum Avibus combines meticulous technique with poetic description of flight.
ANECDOTE

Hawk Named Frederick II

  • Petrosillo took medievalist students to a falconry center and found a bird named Frederick II, underscoring the living legacy of the treatise.
  • Seeing the living practice convinced her that Frederick's instructions still resonate with modern falconers.
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