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Sanctifying Signs: Making
Christian Tradition in Late Medieval England. by David Aers. Notre
Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press, 2004. Pp. xiv + 282. $55
(cloth); $25 (paper).
David Aers is deservedly one of the most widely read literary medievalists
of his generation, with six books written over three decades to his credit,
each of them packed with learned, thoughtful, and ethically impassioned
analysis of a range of late fourteenth- and early fifteenth-century texts.
After working for some years within a broadly Marxist paradigm—his
writing remains far more indebted, theoretically and rhetorically, to
Cultural Materialism than to New Historicism—Aers's publications
since the early 1990s have taken an increasingly noticeable turn towards
theology: a turn he admits is unfashionable but defends as vital to any
serious engagement with medieval religious texts (p. ix). Here, English
and Latin texts by William Langland, Nicholas Love, John Wyclif, Walter
brut, William thorpe, and others are thus read, not through modern literary
and political theorists, but through the Gospels, Aquinas's Summa
theologica, and several contemporary theologians, especially Rowan
Williams. Aers seeks to explore how theological controversies around several
important late-medieval signs (the Eucharist; the sign of poverty; the
house) were conducted in a range of academic and vernacular texts and
how all participants in these controversies viewed the relation between
theological theory and sociopolitical practice.
Nicholas Watson
Harvard University
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