Debating with Demons

Pedagogy and Materiality in Early English Literature

Professor Christina M Heckman author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Boydell & Brewer Ltd

Published:21st Aug '20

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

Debating with Demons cover

A consideration of the theme of demons as teachers in early English literature. In early English literature ca 700-1000 C.E., demons are represented as teachers who use methods of persuasion and argumentation to influence their "pupils". By deploying these methods, related to the liberal arts of rhetoric anddialectic, demons become masters of verbal manipulation. Their pupils are frequently women or Jews, seemingly marginal figures but who often oppose the authority of demonic pedagogues and challenge their deceptive lessons. In poetic accounts of the Fall of the Angels, the Fall of Adam and Eve, and the lives of the saints, those who debate with demons redefine the significance of narrative, authority, and resistance in early medieval pedagogy. This book argues that these encounters between demonic teachers and their pupils are both epistemological, altering the pupils' knowledge, and ontological, affecting their state of being. As the pupils "learn", the physical locations theyoccupy align with rhetorical and dialectical topoi, or conceptual spaces in the mind, as minds, souls, bodies, and places are integrated into cohesive lived experience. The volume thus explores early medieval pedagogy as a spirituo-material practice, both embodied and emplaced, with the potential to alter the onto-epistemological dynamics of the world.

This book offers useful studies of the role of the demon-as-teacher in Old English literature. It demonstrates that education in the early Middle Ages was threatened by, but in need of, corruptive demons and their malign pedagogical and verbal art. It is a useful and forward thinking contribution to the subject of learning [..] in the period. * SPECULUM *

ISBN: 9781843845652

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 1g

260 pages