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Walsingham in Literature and Culture from the Middle Ages to Modernity
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Walsingham in Literature and Culture from the Middle Ages to Modernity book
Walsingham in Literature and Culture from the Middle Ages to Modernity
DOI link for Walsingham in Literature and Culture from the Middle Ages to Modernity
Walsingham in Literature and Culture from the Middle Ages to Modernity book
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ABSTRACT
Walsingham was medieval England's most important shrine to the Virgin Mary and a popular pilgrimage site. Following its modern revival it is also well known today. For nearly a thousand years, it has been the subject of, or referred to in, music, poetry and novels (by for instance Langland, Erasmus, Sidney, Shakespeare, Hopkins, Eliot and Lowell). But only in the last twenty years or so has it received serious scholarly attention. This volume represents the first collection of multi-disciplinary essays on Walsingham's broader cultural significance. Contributors to this book focus on the hitherto neglected issue of Walsingham's cultural impact: the literary, historical, art historical and sociological significance that Walsingham has had for over six hundred years. The collection's essays consider connections between landscape and the sacred, the body and sexuality and Walsingham's place in literature, music and, more broadly, especially since the Reformation, in the construction of cultural memory. The historical range of the essays includes Walsingham's rise to prominence in the later Middle Ages, its destruction during the English Reformation, and the presence of uncanny echoes and traces in early modern English culture, including poems, ballads, music and some of the plays of Shakespeare. Contributions also examine the cultural dynamics of the remarkable revival of Walsingham as a place of pilgrimage and as a cultural icon in the Victorian and modern periods. Hitherto, scholarship on Walsingham has been almost entirely confined to the history of religion. In contrast, contributors to this volume include internationally known scholars from literature, cultural studies, history, sociology, anthropology and musicology as well as theology.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter 1|20 pages
Introduction: Walsingham: Landscape, Sexuality, and Cultural Memory
part |2 pages
PART I: LANDSCAPE AND THE SACRED
chapter 3|14 pages
Pilgrimage at Walsingham on the Eve of the Reformation: Speculations on a “splendid diversity” only Dimly Perceived
chapter 4|18 pages
Waste Space: Pilgrim Badges, Ophelia, and Walsingham Remembered
chapter 5|16 pages
From the Holy Family to the Sidney and Lee-Warner Families: The Protestantization of Walsingham
part |2 pages
PART II: THE BODY AND SEXUALITY
chapter 8|18 pages
The Virgin’s “pryvytes”: Walsingham and the Late Medieval Sexualization of the Virgin
part |2 pages
PART III: CULTURAL MEMORY: ARCHITECTURE, LITERATURE, MUSIC