Jennifer Lorden reveals the importance of deeply-felt religious devotion
centuries before it is commonly said to arise. Her ground-breaking study
establishes the hybrid poetics that embodied its form for medieval
readers, while obscuring it from modern scholars. Working across the
divide between Old and Middle English, she shows how conventions of
earlier English poetry recombine with new literary conventions after the
Norman Conquest. These new conventions--for example, love lyric
repurposed as devotional song--created hybrid aesthetics more familiar
to modern scholars. She argues that this aesthetic, as much as changing
devotional practice, rendered later affective piety recognizable in a
way that earlier affective devotional conventions were not. Forms of
Devotion reconsiders the roots and branches of poetic topoi, revising
commonplaces of literary and religious history. This title is part of
the Flip it Open Programme and may also be available Open Access. Check
our website Cambridge Core for details.