
Dreaming of Cockaigne – Medieval Fantasies of the Perfect Life
Author(s): Herman Pleij (Author)
- Publisher: Columbia University Press
- Publication Date: 18 May 2001
- Edition: Illustrated
- Language: English
- Print length: 546 pages
- ISBN-10: 0231117027
- ISBN-13: 9780231117029
Book Description
Editorial Reviews
Review
[A] remarkable book, a scholarly and sumptuous discussion of once-upon-a-time fantasies of the perfect life… rich, learned, witty, and admirably readable.–The New Republic
A serious and even ponderous scholarly study… [with] rigorous textual, paleographical and stylistic analysis… [and including] such interesting points as that modern-day supermarkets’ unlimited abundance and vacation packages promising paradise on earth have succeeded in making this mythical land a reality.–Publishers Weekly
A very useful study, published with high production values, this book is distinguished by the huge amount of information it contains, clear organization, accessibility (thanks to Webb’s fine translation…) and the array of artwork included… The book is an excellent example of the scholarly benefits of concentration on primary sources.–Choice
Following in the footsteps of Huizinga, Pleij makes a daring attempt to provide a complete picture of medieval life in the Netherlands. The result is a rich, at times cinematic, panorama of dreams and reality in the Middle Ages.–NRC Handelsblad
In this entertaining book [Pleij] trawls the medieval Cockaigne literature, partly to display its riches of fantasy and absurdity, and partly to investigate its purposes… There is an abundance of funny and striking information in Pleij’s book, and its broad liberal sensibility rests on solid foundations of scholarship.–Financial Times
[A]nything Pleij writes in his native Dutch is a joy to read. Diane Webb’s exrtemely smooth translation does proper justice to Pleij’s prose, and her renditions of the Middle Dutch texts that form the core of this study deserve high praise. In sum, if Huizinga is truly the founder of Dutch cultural studies, then Pleij has demonstrated with this book that he is a worthy successor to the same cause.–David F. Johnson “Speculum “
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