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Heresy and Literacy, 1000–1530

Collective volume exploring connections between literacy and heresy in late medieval Europe.

Peter Biller (Edited by), Anne Hudson (Edited by)

9780521575768, Cambridge University Press

Paperback, published 6 June 1996

340 pages, 10 b/w illus.
22.8 x 15.2 x 2 cm, 0.482 kg

'... a rich collection of articles with not a single dud in it.' Malcolm D. Lambert, Journal of Ecclesiastical History

Did growing literacy in the later medieval period foster popular heresy, or did heresy provide a crucial stimulus to the spread of literacy? Such questions were posed in the polemic of the time - heretics were laici illiterati but were at the same time possessors of dangerous books which their opponents sought to destroy, and among them were preachers whose skills in dialectic and in exegesis threatened orthodoxy - and have challenged the investigators of heresy and literacy ever since. This collaborative volume, written by a group of established scholars from Britain, continental Europe and the United States, considers the importance of the written word among the main pre-Lutheran popular heresies in a wide range of European countries and explores the extent to which heretics' familiarity with books paralleled or exceeded that of their orthodox contemporaries.

1. Heresy and literacy: earlier history of the theme Peter Biller
2. Literacy and the making of heresy c.1000–c.1150 R. I. Moore
3. Wisdom from the East: the reception by the Cathars of Eastern dualist texts Bernard Hamilton
4. The Cathars of Languedoc and written materials Peter Biller
5. Italian Catharism and written culture Lorenzo Paolini
6. Heresy and literacy: evidence of the thirteenth-century exempla Aaron Gurevich
7. The literacy of Waldensianism from Valdes to c.1400 Alexander Patschovsky
8. Waldensian books Anne Brenon
9. Waldensians in the Dauphiné (1400–1530): from dissidence in texts to dissidence in practice Pierette Paravy
10. Were the Waldensians more literate than their contemporaries (1460–1560)? Gabriel Audisio
11.Writing and resistance among Beguins of Languedoc and Catalonia Robert E. Lerner
12. Religious reading amongst the laity in France in the fifteenth century Geneviève Hasenohr
13. Laicus litteratus: the paradox of Lollardy Anne Hudson
14. Literacy and heresy in Hussite Bohemia Frantisek Smahel
15. Heterodoxy, literacy and print in the early German Reformation Bob Scribner
16. Literacy, heresy, history and orthodoxy: perspectives and permutations for the later Middle Ages R. N. Swanson.

Subject Areas: Literary studies: classical, early & medieval [DSBB]

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