Saturday, May 17, 2014

The Medieval Underworld - Andrew McCall

This book was interesting, but very painful to read because McCall tortures all of his sentences. In McCall's hands, for example, the previous sentence might read: "The sentences of this book, being tortured by McCall, were very painful to read, yet interesting did I find the book."Or some such nonsense.

Anyway, the content was engaging - the book opens with the context of the Middle Ages, the theory behind Church, State, and sin, then the nature of medieval punishment (cruel and unusual), following by a closer treatment of several strains of deviants in the Middle Ages:
    • bandits, freebooters and outlaws
    • richman, poorman, beggarman, thieves
    • prostitutes
    • homosexuals
    • heretics
    • sorcerers and witches
    • Jews
The book ends with an analysis of the medieval conception of hell.

Again, interesting, but perhaps not worth the effort.

1 comment:

  1. Too bad about the tortured language - as you say, if it were a pleasure to read, then sounds interesting and worthwhile, but since not......

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