How to Cite

Kramer, Rutger and Novokhatko, Ekaterina: Dead Authors and Living Saints: Community, Sanctity, and the Reader Experience in Medieval Hagiographical Narratives, in Fafinski, Mateusz and Riemenschneider, Jakob (Eds.): The Past Through Narratology: New Approaches to Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages, Heidelberg: Heidelberg University Publishing, 2022 (Das Mittelalter. Perspektiven mediävistischer Forschung. Beihefte, Volume 18), p. 205–226. https://doi.org/10.17885/heiup.921.c13624

Identifiers (Book)

ISBN 978-3-96822-108-3 (PDF)
ISBN 978-3-96822-107-6 (Hardcover)

Published

05/12/2022

Authors

Rutger Kramer, Ekaterina Novokhatko

Dead Authors and Living Saints

Community, Sanctity, and the Reader Experience in Medieval Hagiographical Narratives

Abstract In this paper, the ‘Gesta Sanctorum Rotonen­sium’, a ninth-century foundation legend of the Breton monastery of Redon, and the ‘Vita Geraldi’, a hagiography of St Gerald of Aurillac, serve as a point of departure for a discussion of how the experience of reading shaped ear­ly medieval communities. By realigning communal forms of hagiographic texts as media, the authors identify and analyse the parts of those texts where the meta-narrative is carefully inserted. By calling into question the ideas of both authorship and audience in the hagiographical con­text, this paper shows how the use of topoi in those texts created a reading experience that was rooted in the local small worlds of the monastic communities and also con­nected them to the universal world of Christendom. Fi­nally, the authors show that a narratological analysis of community-creation in early medieval hagiographic texts can also help us better understand how those communities experienced their relationship with God.