Essays discussing the medieval book, its owners and its readers.
Reading, writing, sharing texts, and book ownership in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, and how they fostered social and intellectual links and networks between individuals, particularly among women: these are subjects whichthe pioneering work of Mary C. Erler has done so much to illuminate. The essays here, in this volume in her honour, build on her scholarship, engaging with Professor Erler’s characteristic use of bibliography in the service of biography by investigating how the physical object of the book can enlighten our understanding of medieval readers and writers. They analyze, for example, what 'reading’ means in terms of the act itself (and the accessories, such asbookmarks, that helped to set the stage for reading), whether done aloud or silently, in such different venues as an aristocratic court, bourgeois household, village community, and monastic cloister. They also consider the culture of medieval reading practices, especially those of women, across social classes, and in terms of the transition between the pre- and post-Reformation periods; the fluidity of genre boundaries; and changes in devotional reading and writing in this liminal period. A wide variety of genres are covered, including secular romance, devotional texts, schoolbooks, and the illustrated Old Testament preface to the famous Queen Mary Psalter, which recasts the story and image of ancient Israelites to suit elite readerly taste.
MARTIN CHASE is Professor of English and Medieval Studies at Fordham University; MARYANNE KOWALESKI is Joseph Fitzpatrick S.J. Distinguished Professor of History and Medieval Studies at Fordham University.
CONTRIBUTORS: Allison Alberts, Caroline M. Barron, Heather Blatt, Martin Chase, Joyce Coleman, Sheila Lindenbaum, Joel T. Rosenthal, Michael G. Sargent, Kathryn A. Smith.
Spis treści
Introduction: Bibliography in the Service of Biography
’Withinne a Paved Parlour’: Criseyde and Domestic Reading in a City under Siege
Beatrice Melreth: A London Gentlewoman and Her Books
How Intellectual Were Fifteenth-Century Londoners? Grammar versus Logic in the Citizens’ Encounters with Learned Men
Social Memory, Literacy, and Piety in Fifteenth-Century Proofs of Age
Crafting the Old Testament in the Queen Mary Psalter
Affective Reading and Walter Hilton’s
Scale of Perfection at Syon
Book Accessories, Gender, and the Staging of Reading
Enska Vísan: Sir Orfeo in Iceland?
Reading the Real Housewives of John Foxe’s
Book of Martyrs
The Writings of Mary Carpenter Erler