One of the significant developments in scholarship in the latter half
of the twentieth century was the awareness among historians of ideas,
historians of theology, and medievalists of the importance of the
Christian scriptures in the Latin Middle Ages. In contrast to an
earlier generation of scholars who considered the medieval period as a
’Bible-free zone’, recent investigations have shown the central
role of scripture in literature, art, law, liturgy, and formal
religious education. Indeed, to understand the Latin Middle Ages one
must understand the value they placed upon the Bible, how they related
to it, and how they studied it. However, despite the new emphasis on
the Bible’s role and the place of exegesis in medieval thought, our
detailed understanding is all too meagre - and generalisations, often
imagined as valid for a period of close to a millennium, abound. How
the Scriptures were used in one pursuit (formal theology for example
relied heavily on ’allegory’) was often very different to the way
they were used in another (e.g. in history writing was interested in
literal meanings), and exegesis differed over time and with cultures.
Similarly, while most medieval writers were agreed that there were
several ’senses’ within the text, the number and nature varied
greatly as did the strategies for accessing those meanings. This
collection of fifteen articles, concentrating on the early Latin
middle ages, explores this variety and highlights just how patchy has
been our understanding of medieval exegesis. We now may be aware of
the importance of the Bible, but the task of studying that phenomenon
is in its infancy.
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Sources and Forms
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781000946949
Publisert
2023
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter