Patricia Badir's "The Maudlin Impression"investigates the figure
of Mary Magdalene in post-medieval English religious writings and
visual representations. Badir argues that the medieval Magdalene
story was not discarded as part of Reformation iconoclasm, but was
enthusiastically embraced by English writers and artists and retold
in a wide array of genres. This rich study bridges the historical
division between medieval and early modern culture by showing the
ways in which Protestant writers, as well as Catholics, used the
medieval stories, art, and symbolism related to the biblical
Magdalene as resources for thinking about the role of the affective
and erotic in Christian devotion. Their literary and artistic
glosses protected a range of religious devotional practices and
lent embodied, tangible form to the God of the Reformation. They
employed the Magdalene figure to articulate religious experience by
means of a poetics that could avoid controversial questions of
religious art while exploring the potency and appeal of the
beautiful.
"The Maudlin Impression "is a literary history of imitation and
invention. It participates in the "religious turn" in early modern
studies by demonstrating the resilience of a single topos across
time and across changing Christian beliefs.
"In this historically rich and theoretically informed study,
Patricia Badir argues that the medieval figure of Mary Magdalene
serves as a 'site of memory' for early modern writers, enabling
them both to reflect on what has been lost in the aftermath of the
Reformation and to fashion their own Protestant and
Counter-Reformation models of piety, repentance, mourning, and
holiness. Drawing from poems, plays, sermons, homilies,
biographies, and paintings, Badir convincingly demonstrates the
remarkable resiliency and flexibility of the Magdalene trope in the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Her fascinating narrative
traces the evolution of the Magdalene from the Reformation to the
Restoration and raises provocative questions about the mnemonic
function of religious art, the power of beautiful images in an
iconoclastic culture, and the place of affect, longing, and
embodiment in a Protestant poetics." --Huston Diehl, University of
Iowa
"In the aftermath of the Reformation, the English wrote about
Mary Magdalene. Sometimes she belongs to a specifically Protestant
poetics: the gaudy Catholic whore turned Reformed penitent. Yet
most post-Reformation Magdalenes resist Catholic-or-Protestant
pigeonholing; instead, all unexpectedly, Badir's quick-eyed
scholarship discloses continuities, convergences, recuperations. .
. . Her] book luminously teaches the all-important lesson that the
Reformation fought in polemics was not necessarily the Reformation
found in poetry." --Debora Shuger, University of California, Los
Angeles
"A marvelously textured account from an early modern perspective
of an alluring sacred figure about whom there has recently been a
Renaissance of cultural interest--popular as well as scholarly.
Badir subtly explicates how the theological and artistic issues
concerning the devotional depiction of the Magdalene go to the core
of Christian representational practice, provoking, all along the
way, questions about gender, desire, and sacred eroticism."
--Richard Rambuss, Emory University
General
Imprint: |
University of Notre Dame Press
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Series: |
ReFormations: Medieval and Early Modern |
Release date: |
October 2009 |
First published: |
2009 |
Authors: |
Patricia Badir
|
Dimensions: |
229 x 152 x 17mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback
|
Pages: |
320 |
Edition: |
New |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-268-02215-0 |
Categories: |
Books >
Arts & Architecture >
General
|
LSN: |
0-268-02215-1 |
Barcode: |
9780268022150 |
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