The Saint's Life and the Senses of Scripture

Hagiography as Exegesis

Ann W Astell author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of Notre Dame Press

Published:15th Jul '24

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Saint's Life and the Senses of Scripture cover

Through close examination of ancient, medieval, and modern Lives of the saints, Ann W. Astell demonstrates how the historical transformation of hagiography as a genre correlates with similar changes in biblical studies.

Christian hagiography flourished from the fourth to the fifteenth centuries, illuminating the gospel through the overlapping forms of exempla and vita. Originally, the Lives of the saints were understood as hermeneutical extensions of the Bible—God authors the saint, just as God authors the divinely inspired scriptures. During the medieval period, a sense of dual authorship between God and the cooperating saint developed, paralleling the Scholastic impulse to assign greater agency to the human writers of scripture. Then, in the sixteenth century, powerful new anxieties about historical truth pushed hagiography aside for biography, its successor.

Drawing on her expertise in the history of Christianity and biblical exegesis, Astell convincingly shows how this radical shift in hagiography’s status—the loss of the literal, allegorical, tropological, and anagogical senses of the Lives—serves as a bellwether for modern biblical reception.

“Astell reads skillfully, writes lucidly, and is on top of her material.” —Barbara Newman, author of The Permeable Self


“An original contribution to the field of medieval studies, in particular, but also religious history.” —Ian Christopher Levy, author of Introducing Medieval Biblical Interpretation

ISBN: 9780268208110

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm

Weight: unknown

400 pages