The Early History of Greed:
The Sin of Avarice in Early Medieval Thought and Literature.
By Richard Newhauser. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000. Pp.
xiv + 246.
Communis opinio held that avaritia was not an issue in the early Middle
Ages (p. xiii) but, rather, accompanied the rise of a mercantile economy
in the eleventh century. But men have always striven to retain and to
acquire, and moralists have always inveighed against avarice. Newhauser
provides an "early history of greed." Its focus is not the instantiation
of the sin or the social emotion, but the pathology of avarice as seen
by those Christian authors with some systematizing interest in the matter.
A very clear offshoot of the author's generically focused The Treatise
on Vices and Virtues in Latin and the Vernacular (1993), this book combines
moments and authors, treated by picture-painting, with argumentation about
general trends and significant departures. The subtitle is misleading:
most of the book is devoted to Late Antiquity.
Danuta Shanzer
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign |
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