Wednesday, November 13, 2019
The Medieval Church, The Book of Margery Kempe and Everyman :: Book of Margery Kempe Essays
The Medieval Church, The Book of Margery Kempe and Everyman       While the Reformation is generally regarded to have begun with Martin Lutherââ¬â¢s     famous treatise of 1517, the seeds of dissent sown in the 14th    century had already taken     full root in England by the middle of the 15th    century. War, disease, and oppressive     government led to a general anger toward the Catholic Church, believed to be ââ¬Å"among the     greatest of the oppressive landownersâ⬠ (Norton 10). John Wycliffe, whose sermons     preached against abuses in the church and attempted to shift the focus of religious faith     away from church rituals and onto scriptural interpretation, was persecuted. Renaissance     Humanismââ¬â¢s notion of individual agency was filtering across the Channel. The medieval     texts The Book of Margery Kempe (probably written in the late 1430s) and Everyman    (after 1485) are therefore products of turbulent religious times. Everyman, in that it     highlights the importance of the sacraments and the clergy, can be seen as a response on     the part of the Catholic Church to the challenges it faced. The Book of Margery Kempe     gives hints into the nature of these challenges. Both texts reveal a medieval concern     about the role of the clergy in England.          The Book of Margery Kempe, while presented as spiritual autobiography, was also a     story as transcribed by a priest. Although the manuscript was not ââ¬Å"discoveredâ⬠ until     1934, it shows evidence of having been read and studied much before this time.     Annotations by four additional hands, probably ââ¬Å"monks associated with the important     Carthusian priory of Mount Grace in Yorkshireâ⬠ fill the margins of the British Library     MS (Staley 2). Believed to retain ââ¬Å"much of the characteristic form and expression of its     authorâ⬠, it nonetheless must be remembered that Kempeââ¬â¢s story was interpreted and     presented through a very specific (clerical) lens (Norton 367). Lynn Staley, who studied     the early annotations made to the original manuscript, notes that the marginal comments     and underlining ââ¬Å"are directed toward elucidating the ââ¬Å"affectiveâ⬠ emphasis of the textâ⬠ (5).     ââ¬Å"The challenge to authority implicit in Margeryââ¬â¢s experiences,â⬠ Staley continues, ââ¬Å"is     downplayed by highlighting those characteristics that link Margery to the conventions of     spiritual ecstasyâ⬠ (6). Staley suggests that Kempeââ¬â¢s narration is shaped ââ¬Å"to guide     subsequent readers towards a carefully controlled response, one that obviates the radical     social gospel submerged in Kempeââ¬â¢s Narrativeâ⬠ (6). Given that this ââ¬Å"radical social     gospelâ⬠ is nonetheless present in Kempeââ¬â¢s story and that it contains an ambiguous picture     					    
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