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Richard Rolle and the Invention of Authority
A 1991 literary study of Richard Rolle, one of the most widely read English writers of the late Middle Ages.
Nicholas Watson (Author)
9780521033152, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 1 February 2007
376 pages
22.8 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm, 0.565 kg
"...the most substantial assessment of Rolle and his importance since Hope Emily Allen's monumental Writings Ascribed to Richard Rolle, Hermit of Hampole, and Materials for His Biography, published in 1927. It is a meticulous study of Rolle's works, emphasizing the Latin ones, as evidence for an emerging authorial persona that could reconcile Rolle's conflicting apologetic and didactic aims....[T]hose who stick with it will be impressed by a lively intelligence engaged on an elusive subject, who in his writings tended to speak through the veiled language of Scripture rather than directly. Watson and his publishers are to be praised for the abundance and length of the Latin quotations (with good translations) allowed into the book....Except for Hope Emily Allen, no one to date has devoted so much serious attention to Rolle's style. The reader who perseveres with Watson will arrive at a new respect for Rolle's career...." Michael P. Kuczynski, Speculum
This 1991 book is a literary study of the career of Richard Rolle (d.1349), a Yorkshire hermit and mystic who was one of the most widely read English writers of the late Middle Ages. Nicholas Watson proposes a chronology of Rolle's writings, and offers a literary analyses of a number of his works. He shows how Rolle's career, as a writer of passionate religious works in Latin and later in English, has as its principal focus the establishment of his own spiritual authority. The book also addresses wider issues, suggesting an alternative way of looking at mystical writing in general and challenging the prevailing view of the relationship between medieval and renaissance attitudes to authors and authority.
Preface
List of abbreviations
Introduction - contexts: three preliminary essays
Part I: 1. Interpreting Rolle's life
2. The structure of Rolle's thought
Part II: 3. Active life: Judica me as apologetic pastoral
4. Contemplative life, 'Seeing into Heaven': commentaries and Canticum amoris
Part III: 5. Contemplative life, Fervor: Incendium amoris
6. Contemplative life, Dulcor: super psalmum vicesimum, Super canticum canticorum, Contra amatores mundi
7. Contemplative life, Canor: melos amoris
Part IV: 8. 'Mixed' life: Super lectiones mortuorum and Emendatio vitae
9. 'Mixed' life: the English works
Epilogue: Rolle as a late medieval Auctor
Excursus I: the chronology of Rolle's writings
Excursus II: Rolle's reading and the reliability of the Officium
Notes
Bibliography
Index.
Subject Areas: Literary studies: classical, early & medieval [DSBB]
