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Essays exploring the great religious and devotional works of the
Middle Ages in their manuscript and other contexts. Michael G.
Sargent's scholarship on late medieval English devotional
literature has been hugely influential on the fields of Middle
English literature, religious studies, and manuscript studies. His
prolific work on a great range of English and French texts,
including visionary writing, devotional guidance, and drama,
devoting scrupulous attention to the physical forms in which these
texts circulated, has established the scope and impact of religious
writing across the social spectrum in England, enabling a nuanced
understanding of the complex literary interactions between the
cloister and the world. The essays in this volume demonstrate and
pay tribute to Sargent's influence, extending and complementing his
work on devotional texts and the books in which they traveled. The
themes of translation, manuscript transmission and the varieties of
devotional practice are to the fore. Inspired by Sargent's work on
Love's Middle English translation of pseudo-Bonaventuran devotional
texts, some chapters explore other Middle English translations
within this tradition, considering the implications of translation
strategies for shaping readers' practices, while others examine
Carthusian and Birgittine texts as they appear in new contexts,
probing the continuing influence of these orders on devotional life
and theological controversy. Whether looking at devotional
guidance, visionary texts, or hagiography, each contribution works
closely with texts in their material contexts, always considering a
question central to Sargent's scholarship: how texts gain distinct
cultural meanings within particular circumstances of copying,
transmission and ownership.
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