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Margery Kempe and Miracles: Guarding Understanding and Interpretation of Experience

  • Daniel F. Pigg
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Abstract

The Book of Margery Kempe presents its readers with images of Margery Kempe and those around her wrapped in a world of mystery and mysticism, with miracles an assumed reality. At the same time, however, at the narrative level, readers are presented with detractors who question whether miracles have actually occurred. Through instances of the miraculous ability to read, the miraculous ability to hear and understand other languages, mysteries surrounding Eucharistic celebrations, and a miraculous preservation in church when a portion of the building’s ceiling falls on her, the presence of the miraculous is ambiguous. Even Margery Kempe herself along with her scribes at times leaves open the question of whether a miracle has occurred. Modern readers may be skeptical of the miraculous, but in The Book of Margery Kempe images of faith in miracles and skepticism of them sit side by side rhetorically speaking. In that way, The Book of Margery Kempe not only affirms the miraculous, but also casts doubt on their very appearance. In essence, the narrative empowers readers to make their own decisions about the presence of miracles in and through the life and work of Margery Kempe.

Abstract

The Book of Margery Kempe presents its readers with images of Margery Kempe and those around her wrapped in a world of mystery and mysticism, with miracles an assumed reality. At the same time, however, at the narrative level, readers are presented with detractors who question whether miracles have actually occurred. Through instances of the miraculous ability to read, the miraculous ability to hear and understand other languages, mysteries surrounding Eucharistic celebrations, and a miraculous preservation in church when a portion of the building’s ceiling falls on her, the presence of the miraculous is ambiguous. Even Margery Kempe herself along with her scribes at times leaves open the question of whether a miracle has occurred. Modern readers may be skeptical of the miraculous, but in The Book of Margery Kempe images of faith in miracles and skepticism of them sit side by side rhetorically speaking. In that way, The Book of Margery Kempe not only affirms the miraculous, but also casts doubt on their very appearance. In essence, the narrative empowers readers to make their own decisions about the presence of miracles in and through the life and work of Margery Kempe.

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Contents V
  3. Miracles, Wonders, and Human Existence Globally and in the Pre-Modern Age: Also an Introduction 1
  4. (False) Miracles, Doctors and the potentia of Saints in the Gaul of Gregory of Tours 107
  5. Apostle’s Miracles and Kings’ Authority in West Francia (ca. 850–ca. 1050) 127
  6. Fecundity, Motherhood and Healing Karāmāt (Miracles): A Comparative Study of Sayyidah Nafīsah and Christian Women Saints 161
  7. Intertextuality and the Transcendental Miracle of Abū al-ʿAlāʾ al-Maʿarrī’s Risālat al-Ghufrān (The Epistle of Forgiveness) (1033 C.E.) 189
  8. The Miracles of Solomon: A Comparative Study of Al-Thaʿlabī’s Qiṣaṣ Al-Anbiyāʾ and “The City of Brass,” a Tale in the Arabian Nights Collection 215
  9. Miracle Accounts as Teaching Aids and Learning Tools: Caesarius of Heisterbach’s Dialogus Miraculorum as a Mirror of Everyday Life and the History of Mentality 241
  10. The Ultimate Miracle: Revival of the Dead in Alfonso X’s Cantigas de Santa Maria 275
  11. Miracle of Miracles: Improbable Choices and Impossible Outcomes in Dante’s Paradiso 299
  12. Miraculosa gratia: Discerning the Spirit, Discerning the Body in the Liber of Angela of Foligno and in the Vita of Clare of Montefalco 337
  13. Miraculous Revelation in the Middle English Pearl 375
  14. The Miracles of the Immaculate Conceptions in the St. Anne’s Legend and the Middle English Joseph of Aramathie 405
  15. “Many ferlis han fallen in a fewe ȝeris”: Debt, Obligation, Godly Presence, and Grasping the Miraculous in Piers Plowman 427
  16. Margery Kempe and Miracles: Guarding Understanding and Interpretation of Experience 459
  17. Where Has God Gone in the Vernacular Renderings of Lanfranc’s Chirurgia magna? 477
  18. Non vidit, sed firmiter credit – The Many Roles of Jews in Christian Miracle Narratives 505
  19. “Never of Myselff”: Failure and Interiority in Malory’s “The Healing of Sir Urry” 555
  20. Between Wonders and Miracles. The Use and Abuse of Natural Substances in the Healing Rituals of Late Medieval and Early Modern Popular Culture 581
  21. Between Wonder and Science: Alchemy in Augurello’s Mini-Epic Chryrsopoeia (1515) 619
  22. “Miraculous Light” – Natural Phenomena and Divine Salvation in the Medieval and Early Modern World 647
  23. Biographies of the Contributors
  24. Index
Heruntergeladen am 28.11.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783112213032-014/html?lang=de
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