Imagining the Parish in Late Medieval England

Ellen K. Rentz

Interventions: New Studies in Medieval Culture

 

3/30/2015
Books are expected to be available April 2015
Literary Criticism/Medieval
224 pp. 6x9




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Table of Contents


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The author recommends the following links:

Literary History and the Religious Turn

The Centre for the Study of Christianity and Culture

Medieval Wall Painting in the English Parish Church

The International Piers Plowman Society

The Warwick Network for Parish Research

 

“Rentz's study draws on a rich and varied historical scholarship in order to explore how literature perceives and judges the parish as a model of spiritual community. In the process, she gives extended, incisive, and compelling close readings not only of what is conventionally labeled ‘literary’ but also of liturgical and catechetical texts.” —Ed Craun, Henry S. Fox Jr. Professor of English, Washington and Lee University

Collective worship and the ritual life of the local parish mattered deeply to late medieval laypeople, and both loom large in contemporary visual and vernacular culture. The parish offered an important framework for Christians as they negotiated the relationship between individual, community, and God. And as a place where past, present, and future came together, the parish promised an ongoing relationship between the living and the dead, positioning the here and now of the local parish in the long trajectory of eschatological time. 

Imagining the Parish in Late Medieval England explores the ways in which Middle English literature engages the idea of lay spiritual community and the ideal of parochial worship. Ellen K. Rentz pairs nuanced readings of works such as Piers Plowman, Handlyng Synne, and the Prick of Conscience with careful analysis of contemporary sermons, spiritual handbooks, and liturgical texts as well as a wide range of visual sources, including wall paintings and stained glass. This new study examines how these texts and images locate the process of achieving salvation in the parish and in the work that parishioners undertook there together.

Ellen K. Rentz is assistant professor of literature at Claremont McKenna College.