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Cistercian Stories for Nuns and Monks

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Around the year 1200, the Cistercian Engelhard of Langheim dedicated a collection of monastic stories to a community of religious women. Martha G. Newman explores how this largely unedited collecti...
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  • 27 November 2020
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Around the year 1200, the Cistercian Engelhard of Langheim dedicated a collection of monastic stories to a community of religious women. Martha G. Newman explores how this largely unedited collection of tales about Cistercian monks illuminates the religiosity of Cistercian nuns. As did other Cistercian storytellers, Engelhard recorded the miracles and visions of the order's illustrious figures, but he wrote from Franconia, in modern Germany, rather than the Cistercian heartland. His extant texts reflect his interactions with non-Cistercian monasteries and with Langheim's patrons rather than celebrating Bernard of Clairvaux. Engelhard was conservative, interested in maintaining traditional Cistercian patterns of thought. Nonetheless, by offering to women a collection of narratives that explore the oral qualities of texts, the nature of sight, and the efficacy of sacraments, Engelhard articulated a distinctive response to the social and intellectual changes of his period.

In analyzing Engelhard's stories, Newman uncovers an understudied monastic culture that resisted the growing emphasis on the priestly administration of the sacraments and the hardening of gender distinctions. Engelhard assumed that monks and nuns shared similar interests and concerns, and he addressed his audiences as if they occupied a space neither fully sacerdotal nor completely lay, neither scholastic nor unlearned, and neither solely male nor only female. His exemplary narratives depict the sacramental value of everyday objects and behaviors whose efficacy relied more on individual spiritual formation than on sacerdotal action. By encouraging nuns and monks to imagine connections between heaven and earth, Engelhard taught faith as a learned disposition. Newman's study demonstrates that scholastic questions about signs, sacraments, and sight emerged in a narrative form within late twelfth-century monastic communities.

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Price: $59.95
Pages: 320
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Publication Date: 27 November 2020
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780812252583
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: HISTORY / Europe / Western, European history, HISTORY / Europe / Medieval
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Martha G. Newman’s Cistercian Stories for Nuns and Monks does much more than its title suggests...Newman’s book shows us that when we look off the beaten path at the less mythologized figures of history,we can gain amore subtle understanding ofmedieval history...[This] is a careful study of how nuns and monks operated
in more nuanced ways than the sweeping generalizations that often characterize descriptions of 'the twelfth century' lead us to believe. Monastic elites formed their faith through stories, and these stories can help us, many years later, finally understand them as they likely understood themselves.

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Martha G. Newman is Associate Professor in the Departments of History and Religious Studies at the University of Texas at Austin.