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Telling Tales:
Sources and Narration in Late Medieval England. By Joel T. Rosenthal.
University Park: Pennsylvania State Press, 2003. Pp. xxv + 217. $49.95.
This volume, part of Penn State University Press's extensive and varied
offerings in medieval history, represents an attempt to advance our understanding
of everyday life by, as the author puts it, "a close reading of various
kinds of testimony, memory, and narrative." Such a close reading permits
us to reconstruct, "by way of eavesdropping, a synthetic tale of the relationships
and interactions of daily life" (p. xiii). Here is another example of
the cultural history approaches that are increasingly being adopted by
social historians and others to "flesh out" or humanize the histories
assembled mostly by documents of institutional provenance, especially
as concerns the experience of the majority. Here, Rosenthal's goal is
to analyze the records for the details of life that they (sometimes adventitiously)
preserve, and also to read those records as emanating from a social experience
that we can at least partly uncover in the evidence. Rosenthal's methodology
and findings are reminiscent of the work of Barbara Hanawalt, whom he
names as one of the authors who provided inspiration for this book. Hanawalt's
work on coroners' rolls similarly provides vivid "snapshots" in time,
conveying the "overwhelming sense of being at the scene," as she wrote
in Ties That Bound: Peasant Families in Medieval England (1986).
Sherri Olson
University of Connecticut
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