Recipes and Book Culture in England, 1350–1600

Author:   Carrie Griffin ,  Hannah Ryley
Publisher:   Liverpool University Press
ISBN:  

9781802074635


Pages:   288
Publication Date:   28 July 2024
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Recipes and Book Culture in England, 1350–1600


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Overview

Recipes are not just instructions. They also embody culture, class, belief, linguistic and literary form, and even include celebrity endorsement. Medieval and early modern recipes can be short and simple but sometimes are not – sometimes they work, and sometimes they do not. They can also be remarkably performative, imaginative, and playful. These essays explore recipes 1350-1600 from a range of perspectives and are unified by an interest in the complexity and richness of these texts. This volume is the first of its kind. It presents new critical perspectives on medieval and early modern recipes, moving beyond concerns with utility to reframe recipes as part of a dynamic textual and intellectual culture. Contributors build on the sustained scholarly interest in recipes and bring fresh approaches to them. The thirteen essays explore topics including medical, culinary and domestic recipes and charms, as well as how they relate more generally to, for instance, book history, art, astrology and social practices. Collectively, the essays reveal a distinctive book culture by exploring the material forms, literary and scribal practices of recipe books. This book is a significant contribution to these areas of study, increasingly central to scholarship in recent years. Open Access versions of the following chapters will be available on publication on the Liverpool University Press website: Hannah Bower, The Brickmaker, the Tavern Keeper, and the Knight: The Role of Obscurity and Imagination in Medieval Medical Recipes and Katherine Storm Hindley, Bodies in the Recipe Collection: Interacting with Manuscript Charms in Late Medieval England

Full Product Details

Author:   Carrie Griffin ,  Hannah Ryley
Publisher:   Liverpool University Press
Imprint:   Liverpool University Press
ISBN:  

9781802074635


ISBN 10:   1802074635
Pages:   288
Publication Date:   28 July 2024
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Ways of Reading Recipes. Carrie Griffin & Hannah Ryley “As the coke and the phisicion wyll agre & deuyse”: Language Cues and Potential Users of Medieval English Medical and Culinary Recipes. Francisco Alonso-Almeida Astrological Questions as Recipes for Knowledge. Mari-Liisa Varila Feasts, Menus and Provisioning in the Fifteenth-century: Evidence from the Porter Manuscript, Yale Center for British Art SK25 .T85 1450. Julia Boffey John Shirley’s Recipes and Fifteenth-Century Celebrity Endorsement. Margaret Connolly The Brickmaker, the Tavern Keeper, and the Knight: The Role of Obscurity and Imagination in Medieval Medical Recipes. Hannah Bower The Luminescence of Medieval Media. Tom White Late Medieval Book-Craft Recipes and Perceptions of the Material Text. Eleanor Baker Domestic Wonder and the Medieval Home. Chelsea Silva Practical Knowledge and Medical Recipes in Sixteenth-century English Travel Writing. Natalya Din-Kariuki Bodies in the Recipe Collection: Interacting with Manuscript Charms in Late Medieval England. Katherine Storm Hindley Latin Recipes in Medical Practitioner Handbooks. Peter Murray Jones “Et melles en semble”: Literariness and a Trilingual Recipe Collection from Late Medieval England. John Colley

Reviews

'“Ffor to cutte an egge of a feelde”. These adventurous essays are at the cutting edge of their field. They recover the recipes for cooking, craft, astrology, medicine and magic, in English, French and Latin of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. They turn in detail to their origins in manuscript ‘material texts’, to learn how recipes were read in late medieval England. At the same time, they challenge ways of reading today, for genres often dismissed as ‘non-literary’. These essays find that recipes not only prompt other acts of creativity—domestic, scientific and artistic; they are themselves full of verbal craft and immaterial imaginings. As well as offering discoveries about the medieval recipes, the chapters themselves are like diverse recipes or models for making practical writing into something serious and delightful. This book joins the current effort to expand and explode the canon of writings from medieval England.' Professor Daniel Wakelin 'The arguments are in general very well presented for the general and specialised readers of the book…it is the first of its kind considering the recipe text as the point of departure for the analysis of recipe culture, and will surely become a landmark and a compulsory primary source for future approaches to the topic.' Professor Francisco Alonso Almeida


Author Information

Carrie Griffin is Associate Professor of English at the University of Limerick, Ireland Hannah Ryley is Lecturer in Medieval English at Balliol College, Oxford. She is also Co-Executive Officer of the Society for the Study of Medieval Languages and Literature.

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