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Abelard and Heloise Constant J. Mews (Senior Lecturer, Department of History, and Director for Studies in Religion and Theology, Senior Lecturer, Department of History, and Director for Studies in Religion and Theology, Monash University)

Abelard and Heloise By Constant J. Mews (Senior Lecturer, Department of History, and Director for Studies in Religion and Theology, Senior Lecturer, Department of History, and Director for Studies in Religion and Theology, Monash University)

Summary

Presents a brief introduction to the lives and thought of two of the most controversial personalities of the Middle Ages. Abelard and Heloise are familiar names. It is their 'star quality', argues the author, that has prevented them from being seen clearly in the context of 12th-century thought - that task he has set himself in this book.

Abelard and Heloise Summary

Abelard and Heloise by Constant J. Mews (Senior Lecturer, Department of History, and Director for Studies in Religion and Theology, Senior Lecturer, Department of History, and Director for Studies in Religion and Theology, Monash University)

Constant J. Mews offers an intellectual biography of two of the best known personalities of the twelfth century. Peter Abelard was a controversial logician at the cathedral school of Notre-Dame in Paris when he first met Heloise, who was the brilliant and outspoken niece of a cathedral canon and who was then engaged in the study of philosophy. After an intense love affair and the birth of a child, they married in secret in a bid to placate her uncle. Nonetheless the vengeful canon Fulbert had Abelard castrated, following which he became a monk at St. Denis, while Heloise became a nun at Argenteuil. Mews, a recognized authority on Abelard's writings, traces his evolution as a thinker from his earliest work on dialectic (paying particular attention to his debt to Roscelin of Compiegne and William of Champeaux) to his most mature reflections on theology and ethics. Abelard's interest in the doctrine of universals was one part of his broader philosophical interest in language, theology, and ethics, says Mews. He argues that Heloise played a significant role in broadening Abelard's intellectual interests during the period 1115-17, as reflected in a passionate correspondence in which the pair articulated and debated the nature of their love. Mews believes that the sudden end of this early relationship provoked Abelard to return to writing about language with new depth, and to begin applying these concerns to theology. Only after Abelard and Heloise resumed close epistolary contact in the early 1130s, however, did Abelard start to develop his thinking about sin and redemption--in ways that respond closely to the concerns of Heloise. Mews emphasizes both continuity and development in what these two very original thinkers had to say.

About Constant J. Mews (Senior Lecturer, Department of History, and Director for Studies in Religion and Theology, Senior Lecturer, Department of History, and Director for Studies in Religion and Theology, Monash University)

Constant J. Mews is Director of the Centre for Studies in Religion and Theology at Monash University in Australia. He is the author of The Lost Love Letters of Heloise and Abelard: Perceptions of Dialogue in Twelfth-Century France (1999).

Additional information

NPB9780195156881
9780195156881
0195156889
Abelard and Heloise by Constant J. Mews (Senior Lecturer, Department of History, and Director for Studies in Religion and Theology, Senior Lecturer, Department of History, and Director for Studies in Religion and Theology, Monash University)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
2005-01-13
328
Winner of British Academy Medal Award Winner 2014.
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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