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and quot;Every Valley Shall Be Exalted and quot;: The Discourse of Opposites in Twelfth-Century Thought - Constance Brittain Bouchard December 12, 2002 PDF  BOOKS
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and quot;Every Valley Shall Be Exalted and quot;: The Discourse of Opposites in Twelfth-Century Thought
Author: Constance Brittain Bouchard
Year: December 12, 2002
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 21 MB
Language: English

In high medieval France, men and women saw the world around them as the product of tensions between opposites. Imbued with a Christian culture in which a penniless preacher was also the King of Kings and the last were expected to be first, twelfth-century thinkers brought order to their lives through the creation of opposing categories. In a highly original work, Constance Brittain Bouchard examines this poorly understood component of twelfth-century thought, one responsible, in her view, for the fundamental strangeness of that culture to modern thinking. Scholars have long recognized that dialectical reasoning was the basic approach to philosophical, legal, and theological matters in the high Middle Ages. Bouchard argues that this way of thinking and categorizing-which she terms a and "discourse of opposites and "-permeated all aspects of medieval thought. She rejects suggestions that it was the result of imprecision, and provides evidence that people of that era sought not to reconcile opposing categories but rather to maintain them. Bouchard scrutinizes the medieval use of opposites in five broad scholasticism, romance, legal disputes, conversion, and the construction of gender. Drawing on research in a series of previously unedited charters and the earliest glossa manuscripts, she demonstrates that this method of constructing reality was a constitutive element of the thought of the period.

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