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Published By Springer Nature

2040-5979, 2040-5960

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 5-13
Author(s):  
Shazia Jagot ◽  
Julie Orlemanski ◽  
Sara Ritchey

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 1-4
Author(s):  
Shazia Jagot ◽  
Julie Orlemanski ◽  
Sara Ritchey

Author(s):  
Landon Reitz

AbstractDevotional practices in the later European Middle Ages were highly somatic, and they utilized the human sensorium to convey, incite, and engender knowledge and experiences of the divine. Reading does not normally stand out as one of the more somatic devotional practices, but as demonstrated by the example of the Legatus divinae pietatis, a devotional text written at the convent of Helfta around the end of the thirteenth century, reading was indeed imagined as a somatic, devotional experience that engaged the senses. In this article, I argue that the Legatus portrays a form of devotional reading that invokes all the senses in an effort to unite the book, the reader, and her community with the divine. Drawing on medieval conceptualizations of the human sensorium and theories of reading, my analyses of the Legatus’s sensual language, evocative imagery, and scenes of reading elucidate the embodied reading practices that the Legatus’s writers portrayed as fundamental to their communal, devotional lives.


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