New Legends of England
Forms of Community in Late Medieval Saints' Lives
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Pennsylvania Press
Published:15th Mar '18
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

In New Legends of England, Catherine Sanok examines a significant, albeit previously unrecognized, phenomenon of fifteenth-century literary culture in England: the sudden fascination with the Lives of British, Anglo-Saxon, and other native saints. Embodying a variety of literary forms-from elevated Latinate verse, to popular traditions such as the carol, to translations of earlier verse legends into the medium of prose-the Middle English Lives of England's saints are rarely discussed in relation to one another or seen as constituting a distinct literary genre. However, Sanok argues, these legends, when grouped together were an important narrative forum for exploring overlapping forms of secular and religious community at local, national, and supranational scales: the monastery, the city, and local cults; the nation and the realm; European Christendom and, at the end of the fifteenth century, a world that was suddenly expanding across the Atlantic.
Reading texts such as the South English Legendary, The Life of St. Etheldrede, the Golden Legend, and poems about Saints Wenefrid and Ursula, Sanok focuses especially on the significance of their varied and often experimental forms. She shows how Middle English Lives of native saints revealed, through their literary forms, modes of affinity and difference that, in turn, reflected a diversity in the extent and structure of medieval communities. Taking up key questions about jurisdiction, temporality, and embodiment, New Legends of England presents some of the ways in which the Lives of England's saints theorized community and explored its constitutive paradox: the irresolvable tension between singular and collective forms of identity.
"This is a very rich book that confidently traverses a wide scope of texts, concepts, and contexts. Sanok's claim for the intellectual depth of these hitherto derided hagiographical compositions are persuasively stated and extremely thought provoking. There is much here to appeal, not just to those interested in medieval saints and devotion but also to those seeking to better understand how people in late medieval England made sense of their communities and of themselves."" (Speculum) "[A]mbitious in scope, situating the work of the SEL poet, Osbern Bokenham, and John Lydgate in a larger context of vernacular hagiographic production in the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. Impressively interdisciplinary, and copiously annotated and indexed, Sanok's stylish monograph combines textual and critical expertise and contemporary theory of poetic form, "scale," and "community" (the book's recurring theme) with a thorough grounding in modern historical scholarship, on which Sanok draws judiciously to contextualize and historicize her primary texts." (Modern Philology) "New Legends of England provides a rich, rewarding examination of the different scales of communities, in space and time, imagined by Middle English legends of British saints. Providing a new lens through which to revisit saints' lives and modeling formalist reading practices at their most productive, this is a book that scholars of Middle English and hagiography will be thinking with for years to come." (Journal of British Studies) "[A] rigorous investigation of the ways in which community was scaled in the late Middle Ages - from one's own interiority to the sense of belonging to a global Christendom - and how this consideration of scale is present in hagiography from the period. Sanok's theory of saints as mediating forces, able at once to represent the lived female experience and a local community like the one at Wilton Abbey, is consistently well-supported by her close-reading of the Lives as well as her consideration of the texts' form." (Anglia) "
New Legends of England is a splendid adcti1io11 10 rhe growing body or revisionary scholarship of hagiography and on fifteenth-century English literature generally. Sanok challenges us to think more deeply about 1he relationship between various forms of community and more broadly about the· relationship between poetics and politics. Her study shows how understanding medieval hagiography con1ributes to a fuller and richer understanding of literary of history.
I en1husiastically recon111,c•ncl i1 10 anyon<' \,•i1h an i111eres1 in :Vliddk• English literature or 111ore bro,,dl)' in the culture ancl poliliC's of late n1c-clicval England.
ISBN: 9780812249828
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
360 pages