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The Medieval Hospital - Literary Culture and Community in England, 1350-1550 (Hardcover)
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The Medieval Hospital - Literary Culture and Community in England, 1350-1550 (Hardcover)
Series: ReFormations: Medieval and Early Modern
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Nicole Rice’s original study analyzes the role played by late
medieval English hospitals as sites of literary production and
cultural contestation. The hospitals of late medieval England defy
easy categorization. They were institutions of charity, medical
care, and liturgical commemoration. At the same time, hospitals
were cultural spaces sponsoring the performance of drama, the
composition of medical texts, and the reading of devotional prose
and vernacular poetry. Such practices both reflected and connected
the disparate groups—regular religious, ill and poor people,
well-off retirees—that congregated in hospitals. Nicole
Rice’s The Medieval Hospital offers the first
book-length study of the place of hospitals in English literary
history and cultural practice. Rice highlights three English
hospitals as porous sites whose practices translated into textual
engagements with some of urban society’s most pressing concerns:
charity, health, devotion, and commerce. Within these institutions,
medical compendia treated the alarming bodies of women and
religious anthologies translated Augustinian devotional practices
for lay readers. Looking outward, religious drama and socially
charged poetry publicized and interrogated hospitals’ caring
functions within urban charitable economies. Hospitals provided the
auspices, audiences, and authors of such disparate literary works,
propelling these texts into urban social life. Between ca. 1350 and
ca. 1550, English hospitals saw massive changes in their fortunes,
from the devastation of the Black Death, to various
fifteenth-century reform initiatives, to the creeping dissolutions
of religious houses under Henry VIII and Edward VI. This volume
investigates how hospitals defined and defended themselves with
texts and in some cases reinvented themselves, using literary means
to negotiate changed religious landscapes.
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