Focusing on the period between the Wycliffite critique of images and Reformation iconoclasm, Shannon Gayk investigates the sometimes complementary and sometimes fraught relationship between vernacular devotional writing and the religious image. She examines how a set of fifteenth-century writers, including Lollard authors, John Lydgate, Thomas Hoccleve, John Capgrave, and Reginald Pecock, translated complex clerical debates about the pedagogical and spiritual efficacy of images and texts into vernacular settings and literary forms. These authors found vernacular discourse to be a powerful medium for explaining and reforming contemporary understandings of visual experience. In its survey of the function of literary images and imagination, the epistemology of vision, the semiotics of idols, and the authority of written texts, this study reveals a fifteenth century that was as much an age of religious and literary exploration, experimentation, and reform as it was an age of regulation.
Shows how fifteenth-century writers explored the complex relationships between visual and verbal images.About the AuthorShannon Gayk is Assistant Professor of English at Indiana University.
Reviews'... Image, Text, and Religious Reform in Fifteenth-Century England is a timely and detailed study of the complex relationship between religious images and English devotional texts written in the last pre-Reformation century ... Gayk's learned book is an important contribution to what Vincent Gillespie describes as the continued "religious turn" in Middle English studies.' English Studies
Book InformationISBN 9780521190800
Author Shannon GaykFormat Hardback
Page Count 266
Imprint Cambridge University PressPublisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 570g
Dimensions(mm) 235mm * 159mm * 18mm