, Brepols, 2024 Paperback, 269 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Language: English. ISBN 9782503612676.
Summary The present volume develops a new conceptual perspective on late-medieval meditation, particularly in Hugh of Saint-Victor, Guigo II, and Bonaventure of Bagnoregio. For the most part, modern commentaries on the subject have relegated rhetoric to the margins of attention, if not to complete silence. In contrast, this book contends that these writers arrived at their distinctive conceptions of meditation by drawing from the Ciceronian rhetorical tradition. They did so by deepening earlier rhetorical treatments of inventio while adapting them to the Christian life. The examination of this topic is divided into three principal and related aspects. First, meditation is studied as a rhetorical notion for a specific kind of mnemonic, rational, and affective exercise. Second, that notion is used to shed light on meditation as a compositional textual practice whose outcomes bear striking analogy to what Umberto Eco called the 'open works' of the Western avant-garde. Finally, meditation emerges as a form of literary reception required for approaching and construing certain works. In exploring each of these aspects, the study shows that rhetoric radically informs, not only Hugh's, Guigo's, and Bonaventure's engagement with meditation, but also their views on salvation history, monastic life, divine revelation, scientific learning, and biblical hermeneutics. Thus, despite the omission or relative insignificance of the ars bene dicendi in most modern investigations, it is argued that rhetoric lies at the core of these authors' entire religious outlook. In this way, the present volume aims to contribute to a better understanding of these medieval figures by filling an important gap in the scholarly literature. TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface Introduction Chapter 1: The Practice of Meditation in Hugh of Saint-Victor's Didascalicon and Its Hermeneutical Consequences 1. The Reason for Scientific Study: Its Organization, Order, and Method 2. The Education of Memory as Method for Textual Study 3. Unifying the Spirit through Memory 4. Meditation and Mnemonic Invention 4.a. Ancient, Medieval, and Hugonian Meditation 4.b. Meditation as Rhetorical Invention 4.c. Unifying the Spirit through Meditation 5. Final Remarks: Hugh's Rhetorical Outlook on Learning and the Christian Life Chapter 2: Meditation and Hermeneutic Openness in Guigo II: The Scala Claustralium and the First Meditation 1. Guigo II and the Practice of Meditation 2. Openness in the First Meditation and the Biblical Form of Writing 3. The First Meditation: Humiliation, Meekness, and Silence 4. Final Remarks: Rhetoric, Meditation, and Openness in Guigo II Chapter 3: Ecclesial Memory, Meditation, and Hermeneutic Openness in Bonaventure of Bagnoregio 1. The Practice of Meditation and Its Place in Christian Life 1.a. Meditation in Bonaventure's Writings 1.b. Meditation and Ecclesial Progress 2. The Literary Strategy and Openness of the Itinerarium 3. Existing, Living, Discerning: The Rational Ascent to God 3.a. The Function of the Passage and Its Two Empty Spaces 3.b. The Triad and Ascent in Augustine 3.c. The Triad and Ascent in Dionysius 3.d. Vegetative Life and the Itinerarium's Inexhaustibility 4. The Openness and Depth of the Itinerarium 5. Final Remarks: Seneca's Bees as Models for Reading and Meditation Epilogue Appendix 1: On the Hermeneutic Reflexivity of Hugh's Didascalicon Appendix 2: Translation, Annotation, and Division of Guigo's First Meditation Bibliography Index