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The Enclosed Garden and the Medieval Religious Imaginary (Nature and Environment in the Middle Ages Book 4) - Liz Herbert McAvoy June 18, 2021 PDF  BOOKS
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The Enclosed Garden and the Medieval Religious Imaginary (Nature and Environment in the Middle Ages Book 4)
Author: Liz Herbert McAvoy
Year: June 18, 2021
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 40 MB
Language: English

During the Middle Ages, the arresting motif of the walled garden - especially in its manifestation as a sacred or love-inflected hortus conclusus - was a common literary device.During the Middle Ages, the arresting motif of the walled garden - especially in its manifestation as a sacred or love-inflected hortus conclusus - was a common literary device. Usually associated with the Virgin Mary or the Lady of popular romance, it appeared in myriad literary and iconographic forms, largely for its aesthetic, decorative and symbolic qualities. This study focuses on the more complex metaphysical functions and meanings attached to it between 1100 and 1400 - and, in particular, those associated with the gardens of Eden and the Song of Songs. Drawing on contemporary theories of gender, gardens, landscape and space, it traces specifically the resurfacing and reworking of the idea and image of the enclosed garden within the writings of medieval holy women and other female-coded texts. In so doing, it presents the enclosed garden as generator of a powerfully gendered hermeneutic imprint within the medieval religious imaginary - indeed, as an alternative and "language and " used to articulate those highly complex female-coded approaches to God that came to dominate late-medieval religiosity. The book also responds to the and "eco-turn and " in our own troubled times that attempts to return the non-human to the centre of public and private discourse. The texts under scrutiny therefore invite responses as both literary and "garden and " spaces where form often reflects content, and where their authors are also diligent and "gardeners and ": the apocryphal Lives of Adam and Eve, for example; the horticulturally-inflected Hortus Deliciarum of Herrad of Hohenburg and the and "green and " philosophies of Hildegard of Bingen's Scivias; the visionary writings of Gertrude the Great and Mechthild of Hackeborn collaborating within their Helfta nunnery; the Middle English poem, Pearl; and multiple reworkings of the deeply problematic and increasingly sexualized garden enclosing the biblical figure of Susanna.

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