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The
"Comene Course of Prayers": Julian of Norwich and Late Medieval
Death Culture
by Amy Appleford,
Harvard University
Perhaps even more than in other areas of medieval scholarship, the study
of sources in visionary writing is decidedly vexed. Philology—a
methodology which traditionally views the identification of sources as
an essential part of understanding a medieval text—has come under
critical pressure in the last thirty years for historical positivism,
a positivism which aestheticminded literary critics fear can transform
a unique literary monument into an annotated historical document. but
scholars studying the sources of visionary texts have the added difficulty
of the rhetorical self-positioning of such works. "Mystic" texts, as Denise
Baker points out, often deny "the contingency of [their] production."
As Michel de Certeau suggests, this difficulty of "source" shadows that
of the visionary author herself, who must carefully negotiate between
the desire to preserve the integrity and truth claim of the mystical phenomenon
but also be seen to defer to the authority of Church. The visionary author
claims to be a conduit for the voice of God, and thus occupies a liminal
position in relation to the received tradition:
[D]ivine utterance is both what founds the text, and what it
must make manifest. that is why the text is destabilized: it is at the
same time beside the authorized institution, but outside it and
in what authorizes that institution, i.e., the word of God. In
such a discourse, which claims to speak on behalf of the Holy Spirit and
attempts to impose that convention on the addressee, a particular assertion
is at work, affirming that what is said in this place, different from
the one of magisterium language, is the same as what is said
in the tradition, or else that these two places amount to the same.
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