Women, Reading, and Piety
in Late Medieval England.
By Mary C. Erler. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. Pp. xii
+ 226; 12 illustrations with a frontispiece. $60.
This is an admirable book. It is well researched, well written, and well
presented, and it represents a real advance in the ongoing reevaluation
of women's reading and literacy in late medieval England. Some years ago,
in a book entitled What Nuns Read (1995), I called for "a modicum
of honest reassessment " (p. 79) on this question, and in the years following
the publication of that book, much has been done to indicate that modicum
might have been too conservative a word. Some studies have concentrated
on localized areas (such as the work of Marilyn Oliva on nuns in the diocese
of Norwich), some have been restricted to a single nunnery (such as Paul
Lee's study of Dartford), some have concentrated on single manuscripts
(an area in which Alexandra Barratt has made useful contributions), some
have been more universal (such as the collections of essays edited by
Lesley Smith and Jane Taylor), and some, alas, have been no more than
what can only be called bandwagon books, profiting from the popularity
of publications in women's studies to tell us little we did not already
know.
David N. Bell
Memorial University of Newfoundland |
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