2008
DOI: 10.1515/text.2008.034
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Reading and meditation in the Middle Ages: Lectio divina and books of hours

Abstract: This article o¤ers a historical perspective on reading as a situated activity through an examination of the medieval devotional practice of reading the book of hours. My historical investigation opens with an analysis of key pedagogical treatises and religious essays popular in the Middle Ages, which provided instruction on reading, its sensori-motor enactment, its interpretive procedures, and its ultimate goal. These texts, which portray reading not as a self-contained and intrinsically motivating activity bu… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
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