Description
Book SynopsisSpiritual seekers throughout history have sought illumination through solitary contemplation. In the Christian tradition, medieval England stands out for its remarkable array of hermits, recluses, and spiritual outsiders—from Cuthbert, Godric of Fichale, and Christina of Markyate to Richard Rolle, Julian of Norwich, and Margery Kempe. In The...
Trade ReviewIt is one of many achievements of Riehle's book to bring to the fore the 'vivid exchange of ideas' between the medieval English mystics and their continental counterparts.... It has been a great pleasure to read this book. The translation is graceful, and the physical, editorial, and typographical makeup of the book reflects the high standards of the press. Considering the ever-decreasing attention non-English publications receive in Anglo-American scholarship, the translation of Riehle's important book into English will ensure that it gets the recognition it deserves.
* Anglistik *
A completely fresh look at the question of solitude and its relationship to the production of theological texts.... A sensitive and subtle book.... Although The Secret Within is centered on familiar writers and works, Riehle's approach to them gives them new freshness.... His detailed, subtle, and dense readings serve to remind us how rich these texts are and how fully they repay constant study.
* Speculum *
It is in the large number of texts analysed that readers can really appreciate the depth and breadth of Riehle's achievement here. Riehle aims to 'consider the texts as works of literary and theological significance' (p. xv), and the book certainly succeeds in these twin aims, at times arguing that the theological sophistication of certain texts has been under-appreciated in previous scholarship (e.g. in relation to Julian of Norwich), and in the process providing the reader with a thorough reminder of the long and varied textual tradition (e.g. the Psalms, Pauline writings, Origen) from which medieval mystical writers could gain both certainty and confusion in theological matters.
* parergon *
Table of Contents1. The Development of Eremitical Mysticism in the British Isles
2. Early Cistercian Theology in England
3. Ancrene Wisse: A Magnificent Exemplar of Early English Mysticism
4. "Female" versus "Male" Spirituality? A Talking of the Love of God and the Meditations of the Monk of Farne
5. Richard Rolle of Hampole: England's First Great Mystic
6. Marguerite Porete's The Mirror of Simple Souls and Its Reception in England
7. The Cloud of Unknowing and Related Tracts
8. Walter Hilton: England’s Mystic Theologian
9. The Singular Vision of Julian of Norwich
10. Margery Kempe: The Shocking “Fool in Christ”
11. Some Aspects of Popularizing Mysticism in Late Medieval England
Conclusion