Allegories of Love in Marguerite Porete's "Mirror of Simple Souls"

This document was uploaded by one of our users. The uploader already confirmed that they had the permission to publish it. If you are author/publisher or own the copyright of this documents, please report to us by using this DMCA report form.

Simply click on the Download Book button.

Yes, Book downloads on Ebookily are 100% Free.

Sometimes the book is free on Amazon As well, so go ahead and hit "Search on Amazon"

Marguerite Porete's 'Mirror of Simple Souls', dating probably to the 1290s, is the oldest known mystical work written in French, and the only surviving medieval text by a woman writer executed as a heretic. This volume analyses its use of interconnected allegories that describe the soul's approach toward God in terms of human social relationships. These include romantic love between lovers in same-sex and mixed-sex pairs, relations among people of differing social rank such as servants and nobles, and rich and poor engaged in economic transactions such as taxation and gift-giving. Gender, rank, and exchange serve as remarkably versatile allegories for spiritual states. Porete uses comparison as an organizing principle that underlies her supple and creative use of allegory, personification, parables, metaphors, similes, proverbs, and glosses. The theologian invites her audience to cross boundaries among literal and figurative registers of meaning, in ways that are emblematic of the soul's ultimate leap toward the divine. Porete's social allegories, the author contends, can provide us with valuable evidence of a medieval thinker's conceptions of God, gender, language, and human capacity for change.

Author(s): Suzanne Kocher
Series: Medieval Women: Texts and Contexts, 17
Publisher: Brepols
Year: 2008

Language: English
Pages: 216
City: Turnhout

Acknowledgements ix
Introduction: Social Analogies for Mystical Theology 1
Chapter 1: Marguerite Porete’s Life and Book 21
Chapter 2: Gender in the Religious Allegory of Love: From Active Women to Passive Souls 81
Chapter 3: From Spiritual Servitude to Freedom: The Allegory of Social Rank 107
Chapter 4: Wealth, Poverty, and the Allegory of Economic Exchange 127
Chapter 5: Models of Interpretation: Allegory, Comparisons, and the Making of Meaning 147
Chapter 6: The Functions of Allegory in the 'Mirror of Simple Souls' 165
Chapter 7: Conclusions: Mysticism, Allegory, and a Medieval Concept of the Self 177
Bibliography 191
Index 20