Challenging Communion: The Eucharist and Middle English Literature

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In this book, Jennifer Garrison examines literary representations of the central symbol of later medieval religious culture: the Eucharist. In contrast to scholarship that depicts mainstream believers as enthusiastically and simplistically embracing the Eucharist, 'Challenging Communion: The Eucharist and Middle English Literature' identifies a pervasive Middle English literary tradition that rejects simplistic notions of eucharistic promise. Through new readings of texts such as 'Piers Plowman', 'A Revelation of Love', 'The Book of Margery Kempe', and John Lydgate's religious poetry, Garrison shows how writers of Middle English often take advantage of the ways in which eucharistic theology itself contests the boundaries between the material and the spiritual, and how these writers challenge the eucharistic ideal of union between Christ and the community of believers. By troubling the definitions of literal and figurative, Middle English writers respond to and reformulate eucharistic theology in politically challenging and poetically complex ways. Garrison argues that Middle English texts often reject simple eucharistic promises in order to offer what they regard as a better version of the Eucharist, one that is intellectually and spiritually demanding and that invites readers to transform themselves and their communities.

Author(s): Jennifer Garrison
Series: Interventions: New Studies in Medieval Culture
Publisher: The Ohio State University Press
Year: 2017

Language: English
Pages: 220
City: Columbus

Acknowledgments ix
INTRODUCTION. Eucharistic Poetics and Christian Community 1
CHAPTER 1. Resisting the Fantasy of Identification in Robert Mannyng’s 'Handlyng Synne' 19
CHAPTER 2. Devotional Submission and the 'Pearl'-Poet 51
CHAPTER 3. Christ’s Allegorical Bodies and the Failure of Community in 'Piers Plowman' 81
CHAPTER 4. Julian of Norwich’s Allegory and the Mediation of Salvation 105
CHAPTER 5. The Willful Surrender of Eucharistic Reading in Nicholas Love and Margery Kempe 132
CHAPTER 6. John Lydgate and the Eucharistic Poetic Tradition: The Making of Community 159
CONCLUSION 182
Bibliography 187
Index 203