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Julian among the Books : Julian of Norwich's Theological Library.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Newcastle-upon-Tyne : Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2016Copyright date: ©2016Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (358 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781443892513
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Julian among the BooksDDC classification:
  • 248.2/2
LOC classification:
  • BV5095.J84 -- .H655 2016eb
Online resources:
Contents:
Intro -- Table of Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Preface -- I: The Westminster Manuscript -- II: Julian's Showing in a Nutshell -- III: Julian's Judaism -- IV: Julian's Benedictinism -- V: Julian and Cardinal Adam Easton, OSB -- VI: Julian and The Cloud Of Unknowing -- VII: Saints, Secretaries, Scribes, Supporters -- VIII: The Amherst Manuscript -- IX: Julian and Margery -- X: Brigittines and Benedictines -- Appendices -- Index.
Summary: Julian among the Books: Julian of Norwich's Theological Library brings together innovative research on aspects of the Showing of Love, especially the Pan-European background of its manuscripts, and their contexts, arguing for the concept of 'Holy Conversations' in a mise en abyme, where her readers, breaking the frame, participate in her contemplative visions. It discusses the three versions of her text, her knowledge of Hebrew, and her Benedictine context and its lectio divina, including textual and physical links with the Norwich monk, Cardinal Adam Easton, OSB, his collegial friendship with St Catherine of Siena and St Catherine of Sweden, and his support for St Birgitta of Sweden's canonisation. The book also explores the library of texts of the 'Friends of God' movement, including the Mirror of Simple Souls of Marguerite Porete, presents the texts of Julian's conversation with Margery Kemp, and discusses the exiled Brigittine and Benedictine nuns who continued to treasure and copy Julian's text on the Continent following England's Reformation.Scholarly methods used in this study include palaeography, codicology, iconography, reader reception, discourse on the Body, use of Hebrew, Greek and Latin, and the concepts of 'Holy Conversation' and 'Textual Communities'. It gives much of the text of the Westminster Manuscript in translation, along with many quotations from the Westminster, Paris and Sloane manuscripts in their original layout and spelling. Illustrated with colour plates of the Julian manuscripts in the centrefold and other images, and black and white figures throughout the body of the text, it brings the reader as close as possible to Julian's writing, her context, and her preservation by other women contemplatives throughout time.
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Intro -- Table of Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Preface -- I: The Westminster Manuscript -- II: Julian's Showing in a Nutshell -- III: Julian's Judaism -- IV: Julian's Benedictinism -- V: Julian and Cardinal Adam Easton, OSB -- VI: Julian and The Cloud Of Unknowing -- VII: Saints, Secretaries, Scribes, Supporters -- VIII: The Amherst Manuscript -- IX: Julian and Margery -- X: Brigittines and Benedictines -- Appendices -- Index.

Julian among the Books: Julian of Norwich's Theological Library brings together innovative research on aspects of the Showing of Love, especially the Pan-European background of its manuscripts, and their contexts, arguing for the concept of 'Holy Conversations' in a mise en abyme, where her readers, breaking the frame, participate in her contemplative visions. It discusses the three versions of her text, her knowledge of Hebrew, and her Benedictine context and its lectio divina, including textual and physical links with the Norwich monk, Cardinal Adam Easton, OSB, his collegial friendship with St Catherine of Siena and St Catherine of Sweden, and his support for St Birgitta of Sweden's canonisation. The book also explores the library of texts of the 'Friends of God' movement, including the Mirror of Simple Souls of Marguerite Porete, presents the texts of Julian's conversation with Margery Kemp, and discusses the exiled Brigittine and Benedictine nuns who continued to treasure and copy Julian's text on the Continent following England's Reformation.Scholarly methods used in this study include palaeography, codicology, iconography, reader reception, discourse on the Body, use of Hebrew, Greek and Latin, and the concepts of 'Holy Conversation' and 'Textual Communities'. It gives much of the text of the Westminster Manuscript in translation, along with many quotations from the Westminster, Paris and Sloane manuscripts in their original layout and spelling. Illustrated with colour plates of the Julian manuscripts in the centrefold and other images, and black and white figures throughout the body of the text, it brings the reader as close as possible to Julian's writing, her context, and her preservation by other women contemplatives throughout time.

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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