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Author Miles, Laura Saetveit.

Title The Virgin Mary's book at the Annunciation : reading, interpretation, and devotion in Medieval England / Laura Saetveit Miles
Published Cambridge : D. S. Brewer, 2020

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Description 1 online resource
Contents Introduction -- Imitatio Mariae : Mary, Medieval Readers, and Conceiving the Word -- Performing the Psalms: The Annunciation in the Anchorhold -- Reading the Prophecies: Meditation and Female Literacy in Lives of Christ Texts -- Writing the Book: The Annunciations of Visionary Women -- Imagining the Book: Of Three Workings in Man's Soul and Books of Hours -- Inhabiting the Annunciation: The Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham and the Pynson Ballad -- Coda: Mary and Her Book at the Reformation -- Bibliography -- Index
Summary The Annunciation remains one of the most recognizable scenes in western Christianity: the angel Gabriel addressing the Virgin Mary, capturing the moment when Christ becomes incarnate. But one consistent detail has evaded our scrutiny - Mary's book. What was she reading? What does her book mean? This innovative study traces the history of Mary's book at the Annunciation from the early Middle Ages through to the Reformation, focusing on a wide variety of religious treatises, visionary accounts, and art. It argues that the Virgin provided a sophisticated model of reading and interpretation that was foundational to devotional practices across all spectrums of society in medieval England, and especially for enclosed female readers. By imitating the Virgin, readers learned how to read; they learned how to pray; they learned how to channel God through vision and revelation. Most of all, they learned how to conceive God spiritually, just as Mary had conceived him physically, and just as she had conceived intellectually her reading of the Old Testament prophecies foretelling the Incarnation - that she herself was part of their fulfillment. The Annunciation offered a hermeneutic model of conception radically based on the reproductive female body, otherwise deeply problematic in medieval culture. Scholars have long studied the importance of the Virgin Mary for medieval people. But few would think of her as an intellectual role model. Yet that is what this book contends - that Mary's reading at the Annunciation is, essentially, a missing link for understanding how reading, interpretation, and devotion worked in the Middle Ages
Analysis Annunciation
Art
Conception
Devotion
Devotional Practices
Female Readers
Hermeneutic Model
Iconography
Incarnation
Interpretation
Medieval Culture
Medieval England
Middle Ages
Old Testament
Reading
Reformation
Religious Treatises
Spiritual Reading
The Virgin Mary's Book
Virgin Mary
Visionary Accounts
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject Mary, Blessed Virgin, Saint -- Annunciation -- History of doctrines
Mary, Blessed Virgin, Saint -- Books and reading
SUBJECT Mary, Blessed Virgin, Saint fast
Subject Books and reading
Genre/Form Art
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781787448780
1787448789