Description

Book Synopsis
A consideration of the metaphor of water in religious literature, especially in relation to women. Women are frequently depicted as unpredictable, difficult to categorise and prone to transformation in medieval religious writings. Water is equally elusive: rivers, wells and seas slip and slide out of the readers' grasp as they alter in metaphorical meaning. This book considers a large span of watery images in a small cluster of late-medieval devotional writings by and for women, in order to explore the association between women and water in the medieval religious imagination. Using writings by Aelred of Rievaulx, Julian of Norwich and a number of anonymous translators - as well as medical, scientific, and encyclopaedic works - it argues for water as an all-purpose metaphor with a particularly resonance for them. Its chapters are organised around a number of particular usages of water as a means of mediation and exchange between the human and the divine, from crossing a stream to dissolving in the peaceful sea of God's love. Through analysis of such recurring tropes, this book reveals that whilst water can be used to hint at transformation of the soul, and greater access to the divine, male authors also use the very same metaphorical material to regulate such access for their female readers.

Trade Review
Hetta Elizabeth Howes' Transformative Waters in Late-Medieval Literature will change your opinion on and imagination of a great many medieval themes, and fundamentally shift your idea of what water does and can do in medieval literature. * Women's History Review *
This elegant new book offers engaging, and often original, insights. -- Journal of Religious History
Transformative Waters is exceptionally readable, offering a fresh perspective on an understudied genre of medieval text. -- Times Literary Supplement

Table of Contents
List of Abbreviations Introduction: In Search of Transformative Waters Chapter One: A Very 'Able' Element Chapter Two: Cleaning the Soul Chapter Three: Speech and Scripture Chapter Four: Transformative Immersion Chapter Five: Blood and Water Conclusion: Reading Water Bibliography Index Acknowledgements

Transformative Waters in Late-Medieval

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    A Hardback by Hetta Elizabeth Howes

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      View other formats and editions of Transformative Waters in Late-Medieval by Hetta Elizabeth Howes

      Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
      Publication Date: 19/07/2021
      ISBN13: 9781843846123, 978-1843846123
      ISBN10: 1843846128

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A consideration of the metaphor of water in religious literature, especially in relation to women. Women are frequently depicted as unpredictable, difficult to categorise and prone to transformation in medieval religious writings. Water is equally elusive: rivers, wells and seas slip and slide out of the readers' grasp as they alter in metaphorical meaning. This book considers a large span of watery images in a small cluster of late-medieval devotional writings by and for women, in order to explore the association between women and water in the medieval religious imagination. Using writings by Aelred of Rievaulx, Julian of Norwich and a number of anonymous translators - as well as medical, scientific, and encyclopaedic works - it argues for water as an all-purpose metaphor with a particularly resonance for them. Its chapters are organised around a number of particular usages of water as a means of mediation and exchange between the human and the divine, from crossing a stream to dissolving in the peaceful sea of God's love. Through analysis of such recurring tropes, this book reveals that whilst water can be used to hint at transformation of the soul, and greater access to the divine, male authors also use the very same metaphorical material to regulate such access for their female readers.

      Trade Review
      Hetta Elizabeth Howes' Transformative Waters in Late-Medieval Literature will change your opinion on and imagination of a great many medieval themes, and fundamentally shift your idea of what water does and can do in medieval literature. * Women's History Review *
      This elegant new book offers engaging, and often original, insights. -- Journal of Religious History
      Transformative Waters is exceptionally readable, offering a fresh perspective on an understudied genre of medieval text. -- Times Literary Supplement

      Table of Contents
      List of Abbreviations Introduction: In Search of Transformative Waters Chapter One: A Very 'Able' Element Chapter Two: Cleaning the Soul Chapter Three: Speech and Scripture Chapter Four: Transformative Immersion Chapter Five: Blood and Water Conclusion: Reading Water Bibliography Index Acknowledgements

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