The Care of Nuns: The Ministries of Benedictine Women in England during the Central Middle Ages
Autor Katie Ann-Marie Bugyisen Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 mai 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190851286
ISBN-10: 0190851287
Pagini: 392
Dimensiuni: 236 x 165 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190851287
Pagini: 392
Dimensiuni: 236 x 165 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
This is unquestionably a challenging volume, based on an impressively broad and thorough examination of the relevant manuscript source material, which all future scholars in the field will need to consult at the outset of their research. Bugyis has also taken care to provide us with many helpful aids in order to amplify her text and assist in clarifying her conclusions.
Bugyis painstakingly collects evidence to show not decline but continuity in pastoral and liturgical practices of nuns. She examines a wide range of sources, but the most important are surviving liturgical books, subjected to rigorous and at times brilliant paleographical, codicological, and textual analysis.
Her work should stand as a very worthwhile discussion...
This is indeed a 'groundbreaking' study as the cover succinctly suggests. ... This is unquestionably a challenging volume, based on an impressively broad and thorough examination of the relevant manuscript source material, which all future scholars in the field will need to consult at the outset of their research.
At last, here is a book on the liturgical practice at Benedictine nunneries in England. ...The impact of this thoughtful study will be felt far and wide.... All in all The Care of Nuns is an admirable and innovative study of active and creative participation of nuns in their liturgies that deserves to be read widely.
Bugyis's The Care of Nuns is a model of sophistication in its interpretation and explication of sources as well as a testament to the enormous amount of archival work completed by its author, who offers new insights into the medieval monastic tradition. It also encourages readers to broaden and enrich their understanding of pastoral work in the history of the Christian tradition.
Katie Bugyis's impressive new book The Care of Nuns: The Ministries of Benedictine Women in England during the Central Middle Ages, has a revisionist project at its heart. In a monograph characterized by careful parsing of evidence from the surviving liturgical books, hagiographic literature, mortuary rolls, cartularies, and seals from communities of Benedictine women in England in the central Middle Ages, Bugyis builds a meticulous case to support her thesis that these women performed ministerial roles including but not limited to liturgically reading the gospels, hearing confessions, and offering intercessory prayer.
Bugyis is a gifted writer...The Care of Nuns is an excellent example of the possibilities for recovering women from surviving texts, incunabula, charts, etc. that scholars love to work with. Scholars will value all the detailed evidence Bugyis gathered for their own work. Needless to say, every monastic library ought to have a copy in their collection.
There is much to commend this book. Its meticulous and rich use of historical sources is an example of the kind of careful scholarship that needs to be practiced by monastic scholars.
The Care of Nuns should prove useful to researchers interested in female liturgy and religiosity. It provides a thought-provoking and fact-based analysis of the ministerial roles women religious performed in central medieval England, that undoubtedly will stimulate further research on how nuns could exercise liturgical and pastoral authority and agency.
In this provocative and deeply learned work, Katie Bugyis offers a compelling account of women's liturgical practice in England, one that considers nuns as liturgical actors, and not (as they have more generally been viewed) as passive recipients of men's spiritual care. In so doing, she builds on earlier studies of female religious life and devotion, while simultaneously moving into new and exciting territory: her book works to tease out of the sources evidence of women's pastoral care and even 'ministry' in medieval monastic life. This important book dramatically revises our knowledge of medieval religious women; their authority within the church; their literacy, reading, and book production; and their spiritual self-governance.
The Care of Nunsis one of those rare books that radically change the received version of a subject. By illuminating how religious women in the central Middle Ages acted as ministers in their own right, Dr. Bugyis opens up a whole new vision not only of the role of medieval women, but of the central Middle Ages itself.
This book is a remarkable achievement, one that shows how close attention to often overlooked sources can reshape the stories we tell about the past. Bugyis brings the nuns she studies alive through seemingly mundane sources, demonstrating the tension between contemporary prescriptions for their activities and what the materials they produced and used daily show us that they did. The result is a methodological model for writing history from 'the bottom up' and an invaluable contribution to the study of Christian monasticism.
Anyone interested in medieval religious women, liturgical practice, or the history of the church will benefit from reading this thoughtful and perceptively argued book.
Bugyis painstakingly collects evidence to show not decline but continuity in pastoral and liturgical practices of nuns. She examines a wide range of sources, but the most important are surviving liturgical books, subjected to rigorous and at times brilliant paleographical, codicological, and textual analysis.
Her work should stand as a very worthwhile discussion...
This is indeed a 'groundbreaking' study as the cover succinctly suggests. ... This is unquestionably a challenging volume, based on an impressively broad and thorough examination of the relevant manuscript source material, which all future scholars in the field will need to consult at the outset of their research.
At last, here is a book on the liturgical practice at Benedictine nunneries in England. ...The impact of this thoughtful study will be felt far and wide.... All in all The Care of Nuns is an admirable and innovative study of active and creative participation of nuns in their liturgies that deserves to be read widely.
Bugyis's The Care of Nuns is a model of sophistication in its interpretation and explication of sources as well as a testament to the enormous amount of archival work completed by its author, who offers new insights into the medieval monastic tradition. It also encourages readers to broaden and enrich their understanding of pastoral work in the history of the Christian tradition.
Katie Bugyis's impressive new book The Care of Nuns: The Ministries of Benedictine Women in England during the Central Middle Ages, has a revisionist project at its heart. In a monograph characterized by careful parsing of evidence from the surviving liturgical books, hagiographic literature, mortuary rolls, cartularies, and seals from communities of Benedictine women in England in the central Middle Ages, Bugyis builds a meticulous case to support her thesis that these women performed ministerial roles including but not limited to liturgically reading the gospels, hearing confessions, and offering intercessory prayer.
Bugyis is a gifted writer...The Care of Nuns is an excellent example of the possibilities for recovering women from surviving texts, incunabula, charts, etc. that scholars love to work with. Scholars will value all the detailed evidence Bugyis gathered for their own work. Needless to say, every monastic library ought to have a copy in their collection.
There is much to commend this book. Its meticulous and rich use of historical sources is an example of the kind of careful scholarship that needs to be practiced by monastic scholars.
The Care of Nuns should prove useful to researchers interested in female liturgy and religiosity. It provides a thought-provoking and fact-based analysis of the ministerial roles women religious performed in central medieval England, that undoubtedly will stimulate further research on how nuns could exercise liturgical and pastoral authority and agency.
In this provocative and deeply learned work, Katie Bugyis offers a compelling account of women's liturgical practice in England, one that considers nuns as liturgical actors, and not (as they have more generally been viewed) as passive recipients of men's spiritual care. In so doing, she builds on earlier studies of female religious life and devotion, while simultaneously moving into new and exciting territory: her book works to tease out of the sources evidence of women's pastoral care and even 'ministry' in medieval monastic life. This important book dramatically revises our knowledge of medieval religious women; their authority within the church; their literacy, reading, and book production; and their spiritual self-governance.
The Care of Nunsis one of those rare books that radically change the received version of a subject. By illuminating how religious women in the central Middle Ages acted as ministers in their own right, Dr. Bugyis opens up a whole new vision not only of the role of medieval women, but of the central Middle Ages itself.
This book is a remarkable achievement, one that shows how close attention to often overlooked sources can reshape the stories we tell about the past. Bugyis brings the nuns she studies alive through seemingly mundane sources, demonstrating the tension between contemporary prescriptions for their activities and what the materials they produced and used daily show us that they did. The result is a methodological model for writing history from 'the bottom up' and an invaluable contribution to the study of Christian monasticism.
Anyone interested in medieval religious women, liturgical practice, or the history of the church will benefit from reading this thoughtful and perceptively argued book.
Notă biografică
KATIE ANN-MARIE BUGYIS is a historian of medieval religious women and Assistant Professor in the Program of Liberal Studies at the University of Notre Dame. She is the co-editor of two volumes, including Medieval Cantors and their Craft and Taken Seriously: Women Intellectuals, Professionals, and Community Leaders of the Medieval World