This volume recognises that religious writings care deeply about how devotional reading takes place, providing models for improving reading as a way of improving one's ability to worship. The abundant evidence from medieval England suggests a deep interest among devotional writers in documenting, teaching, and circumscribing devotional reading, given the importance of careful reading practices for salvation. This volume therefore draws together a wide range of interests in and approaches to studying the reading and reception of devotional texts in medieval England, from representations of readers and reading in devotional texts, to literary production and reception of devotional texts and images, to manuscripts and early books as devotional objects, to individual readers and patrons of devotional texts.
Prefaced by a substantial introduction by the editors - setting the community in its wider religious and cultural environment and against the backdrop of broad historiographical trends - this volume brings together substantial essays based on original research by new and leading scholars in the field of medieval English studies. This collection (and indeed, many of the individual articles) brings into dialogue a number of traditional disciplinary approaches - early and late medieval English literary studies, gender studies, manuscript studies, and religious studies. It strives to reflect trends in current scholarship of breaking down disciplinary boundaries and exploring the relationships between and among not only analytical and critical perspectives, but also the kinds of evidence examined.
Author(s): Kathryn Vulić, Susan Uselmann, C. Annette Grisé (eds.)
Series: Disputatio, 29
Publisher: Brepols
Year: 2016
Language: English
Pages: 290
City: Turnhout
Introduction: Devotional Reading in Late Medieval England: Problems of Definition / Susan Uselmann 1
'Þe lettere sleeþ': Lollards, Literalism, and the Definition of Bad Readers / Anna Lewis 35
'Speculum vitae' and 'Lewed' Reading / Kathryn Vulić 61
Representing Reading in 'Dives and Pauper' / Elizabeth Schirmer 85
Meditative Reading and the Vespers Antiphon in the Monastic Office for Saint Cuthbert / Karmen Lenz 119
'Lectio divina' and Scriptural Reading in Syon's Vernacular Printed Books / C. Annette Grisé 137
A Matter of Convenience: Nicholas Love's 'Mirror' of Private Devotional Reading / Susan Uselmann 159
Printing, Propaganda, and Profit: Richard Pynson and the Life of St. Radegund / Christina M. Carlson 195
'For the prouffyte of other': Lady Margaret Beaufort and the Female Reader as Translator in 'The Mirrour of Golde to the Synfull Soule' / Stephanie Morley 217
Bodleian Library MS Holkham Miscellany 41 and the Modelling of Women's Devotion / Catherine Innes-Parker 237
Afterword: Adaptation, Negotiation, and Transformation / C. Annette Grisé 267