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Punishment and Medieval Education (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,290
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Punishment and Medieval Education (Hardcover)
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An exploration of the contours imposed on physical punishment by
education, establishing how pedagogues accommodated violence into a
system of rules, rituals and objectives. What meanys shall I use to
lurne withoute betynge?, asks a pupil in a translation exercise
compiled at Oxford in 1460s. One of the most conspicuous features
of medieval education is its reliance on flogging. Throughout the
period, the rod looms large in literary and artistic depictions of
the schoolroom: it appears in teaching manuals, classroom
exercises, and even in the iconography of instruction, which
invariably personifies Grammatica as a woman brandishing a birch or
ferule. However, as this book seeks to demonstrate, the association
between teaching and beating was more than simply conventional.
Medieval pedagogues and theorists did not merely accept the utility
of punishment without question, but engaged with the issue in depth
and detail. Almost every conceivable aspect of discipline was
subject to intense scrutiny: the benefits it might transmit to
learners, the relationship between mental development and physical
correction, and the optimal ways in which chastisement should be
performed, were all carefully examined. This book unpicks the
various levels of this debate. It surveys material from multiple
languages and discourses, in order to build up the fullest possible
picture of medieval thought and practice. Each chapter addresses a
specific aspect of punishment in school: topics include the
classical inheritance of medieval teaching, therituals and
structures of discipline, theoretical accounts of its effects, and
the responses of students themselves to grammar's regimen. As a
whole, the study not only exposes the impressive rigour with which
beating was defined, but also some of the doubts, paradoxes, and
even anxieties that surrounded its usage. At the same time, it also
raises larger questions about the presence of violence across
medieval culture, and how we might confront it withoutplaying into
the reductive stereotype of "a barbaric age". BEN PARSONS is
Lecturer in Medieval and Early Modern Literature at the University
of Leicester.
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