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AuthorJames Smith-
Date2015-
Other Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.17613/M6VV28-
URIhttps://www.amad.org/jspui/handle/123456789/75591-
DescriptionThis article explores the representation of hunger and thirst as faculties within medieval spiritual allegory that existed at two forms. In their bodily form, hunger and thirst represented a feeling of lack indicating the need for sustenance. In their figurative moralised form these needs came to represent a longing for that which was missing within the soul, an abstraction of human nutrition. In order to discuss this idea, this article presents two heavily interrelated forms of bodily need rendered as spiritual experience: a greedy longing for wealth with negative moral valance and a spiritual and transcendent hungering and thirsting after lasting spiritual foods. It concludes with the proposal that the abstract qualities of nutritive need (namely hunger and thirst) featured in a rhetorical formula when abstracted and mobilised for the purpose of moral allegory.-
Languageeng-
Keywords11th to 14th century-
KeywordsMedieval literature-
KeywordsMedieval history-
KeywordsMedieval-
Dewey Decimal Classification940-
Title“So the satiated man hungers, the drunken thirsts” The Medieval Rhetorical Topos of Spiritual Nutrition-
AMAD ID569315-
Year2015-
Open Access1-
Appears in Collections:BASE (Bielefeld Academic Search Engine)
General history of Europe


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