Eating words and burning them : the power of destruction in medieval English charm texts

When we think of text, we usually think of it as a form of communication. One person’s words, written down, can be transmitted across continents and centuries, for as long as the writing survives. Destroying that writing destroys, at least symbolically, the ideas it records—one reason that burnin...

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Main Author: Hindley, Katherine Storm
Other Authors: Kühne-Wespi, Carina
Format: Book Chapter
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143933
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1439332020-10-02T01:43:05Z Eating words and burning them : the power of destruction in medieval English charm texts Hindley, Katherine Storm Kühne-Wespi, Carina Oschema, Klaus Peter Quack, Joachim Friedrich School of Humanities Humanities::Language::English Medieval English Destruction of Text When we think of text, we usually think of it as a form of communication. One person’s words, written down, can be transmitted across continents and centuries, for as long as the writing survives. Destroying that writing destroys, at least symbolically, the ideas it records—one reason that burning a book is seen as an act more violent than burning an equivalent amount of unmarked paper. This is not the only way, however, to think about text or about its destruction. In many cultures, both medieval and modern, texts can be seen as carrying physical or spiritual power, power that is not necessarily destroyed along with the text itself.1 Viewed in this way, the destruction of a text can serve a greater creative purpose by releasing and activating the power of the words it contains. In this paper I focus specifically on the destruction of charm texts in medieval England, exploring the variety of ways in which texts could be destroyed for healing purposes and pointing to two broad categories that imply different understandings of textual power. In one, the destruction of text serves to activate its power. In the other, destruction is the only way to limit its effect on the body. Published version 2020-10-02T01:43:05Z 2020-10-02T01:43:05Z 2019 Book Chapter Hindley, K. S. (2019). Eating words and burning them : the power of destruction in medieval English charm texts. In C. Kühne-Wespi, K. P. Oschema, & J. F. Quack (Eds.), Zerstörung von Geschriebenem (pp. 359-372). doi:10.1515/9783110629040-013 978-3-11-062904-0 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143933 10.1515/9783110629040-013 359 372 en Zerstörung von Geschriebenem © 2019 Katherine Storm Hindley, publiziert von De Gruyter. Dieses Werk ist lizenziert unter der Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Lizenz. application/pdf De Gruyter
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::Language::English
Medieval English
Destruction of Text
spellingShingle Humanities::Language::English
Medieval English
Destruction of Text
Hindley, Katherine Storm
Eating words and burning them : the power of destruction in medieval English charm texts
description When we think of text, we usually think of it as a form of communication. One person’s words, written down, can be transmitted across continents and centuries, for as long as the writing survives. Destroying that writing destroys, at least symbolically, the ideas it records—one reason that burning a book is seen as an act more violent than burning an equivalent amount of unmarked paper. This is not the only way, however, to think about text or about its destruction. In many cultures, both medieval and modern, texts can be seen as carrying physical or spiritual power, power that is not necessarily destroyed along with the text itself.1 Viewed in this way, the destruction of a text can serve a greater creative purpose by releasing and activating the power of the words it contains. In this paper I focus specifically on the destruction of charm texts in medieval England, exploring the variety of ways in which texts could be destroyed for healing purposes and pointing to two broad categories that imply different understandings of textual power. In one, the destruction of text serves to activate its power. In the other, destruction is the only way to limit its effect on the body.
author2 Kühne-Wespi, Carina
author_facet Kühne-Wespi, Carina
Hindley, Katherine Storm
format Book Chapter
author Hindley, Katherine Storm
author_sort Hindley, Katherine Storm
title Eating words and burning them : the power of destruction in medieval English charm texts
title_short Eating words and burning them : the power of destruction in medieval English charm texts
title_full Eating words and burning them : the power of destruction in medieval English charm texts
title_fullStr Eating words and burning them : the power of destruction in medieval English charm texts
title_full_unstemmed Eating words and burning them : the power of destruction in medieval English charm texts
title_sort eating words and burning them : the power of destruction in medieval english charm texts
publisher De Gruyter
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143933
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