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Cover illustration: Saint Martin. While the holy man kisses a leper at the gate of Paris, onlookers, including Martin's abusive deacon, Saint Brice, indicate their desire to distance themselves from the horribly disfigured outcase. Bibliothèque Municipale, Tours, Ms. 1018, fol. 36v. Photo courtesy Bibliotèque Municipale, Tours.
A new generation of historians today is borrowing from cultural anthropology, postmodern critical theory, and gender studies to understand the social meanings of medieval religious movements, practices, figures, and cults. In this volume Sharon Farmer and Barbara H. Rosenwein bring together essays -- all hitherto unpublished -- that combine some of the best of these new approaches with rigorous research and traditional scholarship.
Some of these essays re-envision the professionals of religion: the monks and nuns who carried out crucial social functions as mediators between living and dead, repositories for social memory, and loci of vicarious piety. In their religious life these people embodied an image of the society that produced them. Other contributions focus on social categories, usually expressed as dichotomies: male/female, insider/outsider, saint/outcast. Monks and Nuns, Saints and Outcasts is the first book to show the interaction of seemingly antithetical groups of medieval people and the ways in which they were defined by, as well as against, each other. All the essays, taken together, form a tribute to Lester K. Little, pioneer in the study of religion in medieval society.
Sharon Farmer is Associate Professor of History at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She is the author of Communities of Saint Martin: Legend and Ritual in Medieval Tours, also from Cornell. Barbara H. Rosenwein is Professor of History, Loyola University, Chicago, and editor of the Cornell series Conjunctions of Religion and Power in the Medieval Past. Notable among her other books are To Be the Neighbor of Saint Peter: The Social Meaning of Cluny Property, 909-1049 and Negotiating Space: Power. Restraint, and Privileges of'Inimunity in Early Medieval Furope; she is also the editor of Anger Past: The Social Uses of an Emotion in the Middle Ages (all from Cornell).
Contributors:
ALISON I. BEACH
Institute for Advanced Study
LISA M. BITEL
University of Kansas
ROBERT BRENTANO
University of California at Berkeley
SHARON FARMER
University of California at Santa Barbara
PATRICK J. GEARY
University of Notre Dame
THOMAS HEAD
Hunter College, CUNY
LUIGI PELLEGRINI
Università D'Annunzio, Chieti, Italy
CATHERINE PEYROUX
Duke University
AMY G. REMENSNYDER
Brown University
BARBARA H. ROSENWEIN
Loyola University, Chicago
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