
The Mystified Letter
How Medieval Theology Can Reenchant the Practice of Reading
$75.27
- Hardcover
204 pages
- Release Date
4 December 2023
Summary
Reading has become a problem—not just of attention, comprehension, or growing rates of illiteracy, but of politics, society, and religion. The questions of how and what to read are not just matters of taste. Answers are often indicative of one’s entire view of culture, church, and the cosmos, as well as the impasses of religion, reason, and moral vision. As a result, reading has become divisive and uninspiring. Reading has become a drag.
The Mystified Letter offers a hopeful …
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781506486734 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 1506486738 |
| Author: | Craig Tichelkamp |
| Publisher: | Augsburg Fortress Publishers |
| Imprint: | Fortress Press,U.S. |
| Format: | Hardcover |
| Number of Pages: | 204 |
| Release Date: | 4 December 2023 |
| Weight: | 318g |
| Dimensions: | 235mm x 159mm |
You Can Find This Book In
What They're Saying
Critics Review
Stemming from a profound sense that reading is in crisis, Craig Tichelkamp’s splendid new volume offers a creative, novel, and persuasive constructive proposal rooted in the Middle Ages and, more precisely, in the sacralization and enchantment of reading in the monasteries and schools of the high Middle Ages. Deeply informed historically and written with elegance, Tichelkamp’s work proposes practices of mystical reading that address contemporary maladies in academic and ecclesiastical reading cultures in ways captivating not only to medievalists but to all who find the notion of the ““mystified letter,”” be they religious or not, profoundly right and compelling. Highly recommended. –Kevin Madigan, Winn Professor of Ecclesiastical History, Harvard Divinity School; author of Medieval Christianity: A New History
Craig Tichelkamp offers a trenchant diagnosis of the weariness, aridity, and incomprehension that too often attend reading today, both in our churches and at the university. Like the educational reformer Ivan Illich, Tichelkamp turns to the medieval school of St. Victor to remind us that the experience of reading was once charged with mystery. He offers hope that reading can again prove to be rejuvenating, personally transformative, and communally rich. Reading Tichelkamp’s own stirring book proves the point. –Ann W. Astell, professor of theology, University of Notre Dame
Tichelkamp’s study triumphs as an invaluable contribution to the field of medieval Victorine Studies. More broadly considered, his adept treatment of the Victorine inheritance of Dionysian mysticism, as it pertains to the school’s development of a theology of the ““letter,”” will be useful for historical and systematic theologians alike for years to come. Within this broader project, moreover, The Mystified Letter will also serve as an important resource for those who are specifically interested in the thought of Thomas Gallus, whose contributions to the development of a theology of reading within that context are here introduced by Tichelkamp with exquisite clarity and captivating prose. –Katherine Wrisley Shelby, author of Spiraling into God: Bonaventure on Grace, Hierarchy, and Holiness
In The Mystified Letter, Tichelkamp succeeds in making a persuasive, accurate, and quite worthy case for a ““re-enchantment”” of the practice of reading by retrieving the mystical ethos of reading that existed in monastic communities during the Middle Ages, specifically within the culture of the Victorine School in twelfth-century Paris. Such a retrieval, as Tichelkamp correctly explains, is not the imposition of a more ““traditional”” set of values onto the effects of contemporary culture; rather, it is the distilling of essential ideas and practices for the ““radical”” renewal of understanding: here, the author utilizes the medieval monastic understanding of reading as a sacred, potentially mystical relationship between the text and the reader and among a community of readers. Tichelkamp rightly reminds us that in medieval schools, reading both sacred and secular literature was a practice that allowed spaces of mystery and incomprehensibility, that welcomed communion and conversation, but that did not always seek–as we do now–the absolute surety of specific interpretation, forms of analyses that tend to incite division and disagreement. The medieval world regarded the text as sacred and capable of spiritual inspiration as well as moral transformation, which depth of thinking about reading, Tichelkamp argues, we must attempt to recover. Reading, he enthuses, must again become an imaginative as well as cognitive experience, the occasion for wonder and awe and delight, and not only, as happens now too often, simply for technical and perfunctory purposes. For Tichelkamp, the generally medieval but specifically Victorine ease with a mystical sensibility in all matters of life–that is, …
About The Author
Craig Tichelkamp
Craig Tichelkamp is a Catholic theologian whose teaching and research put the medieval theology of reading in critical conversation with contemporary culture. He teaches at Harvard Divinity School and Stonehill College. His work has appeared in Medieval Mystical Theology and the Encyclopedia of the Bible and Its Reception, and he is completing a translation of the Latin commentaries of Thomas Gallus.
Returns
This item is eligible for free returns within 30 days of delivery. See our returns policy for further details.




