The Old English Life of
St Mary of Egypt: An Edition of the Old English Text with Modern English
Parallel-Text Translation.
By Hugh Magennis. Exeter: Univ. of Exeter Press, 2002. Pp. xii + 260.
$22.95.
St. Mary of Egypt (BHL 5415–5421) and her medieval Western hagiography
have attracted a great deal more attention in recent years than previously.
A new anthology of essays, The Legend of Mary of Egypt in Medieval Insular
Hagiography, ed. E. Poppe and B. Ross (Blackrock, 1996), examined the
dimensions of the saint's literary cult in Irish, Old English, Old Norse,
Middle Welsh, Middle English, and Anglo-Norman contexts, and a raft of
separate articles have more recently concentrated on literary interpretations
and individual motifs of this tradition. Among these shorter studies is
Hugh Magennis's "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Heaven: Humorous
Incongruity in Old English Saints' Lives," in Humour in Anglo-Saxon Literature,
ed. J. Wilcox (Cambridge, 2000), pp. 137–57, in a slim volume attempting
to trace whatever sense of humor there is in the work of Anglo-Saxon authors
and translators.
Christine Rauer
University of St. Andrews |
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