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<article dtd-version="1.1" article-type="book-review">
  <front>
    <journal-meta>
      <journal-id>TMR</journal-id>
      <journal-title-group>
        <journal-title>The Medieval Review</journal-title>
      </journal-title-group>
      <issn pub-type="epub">1096-746X</issn>
      <publisher>
        <publisher-name>Indiana University</publisher-name>
      </publisher>
    </journal-meta>
    <article-meta>
      <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">13.06.07</article-id>
      <title-group>
        <article-title>13.06.07, Lockett, Anglo-Saxon Psychologies (John Hill)</article-title>
      </title-group>
      <contrib-group>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <name>
            <surname>Hill</surname>
            <given-names/>
          </name>
          <aff>U.S.Naval Academy</aff>
          <address>
            <email>jdmars@aol.com</email>
          </address>
        </contrib>
      </contrib-group>
      <pub-date publication-format="epub" date-type="pub" iso-8601-date="2013">
        <year>2013</year>
      </pub-date>
      <product product-type="book">
        <person-group>
          <name>
            <surname>Lockett, Leslie</surname>
            <given-names/>
          </name>
        </person-group>
        <source>Anglo-Saxon Psychologies in the Vernacular and Latin Traditions, Toronto Anglo-Saxon Series</source>
        <year iso-8601-date="2011">2011</year>
        <publisher-loc>Toronto</publisher-loc>
        <publisher-name>University of Toronto Press</publisher-name>
        <page-range>Pp. xiv, 495</page-range>
        <price>$85.00</price>
        <isbn>978-1-4426-4217-1</isbn>
      </product>
      <permissions>
        <copyright-statement>Copyright 2013 Trustees of Indiana University. Indiana University provides the information contained in this file for non-commercial, personal, or research use only. All other use, including but not limited to commercial or scholarly reproductions, redistribution, publication or transmission, whether by electronic means or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright holder is strictly prohibited.</copyright-statement>
      </permissions>
    </article-meta>
  </front>
  <body>
    <p>
Leslie Lockett scours the terrain of Old English poetry and prose to
confirm her claim that a "hydraulic model" characterizes Anglo-Saxon
thinking about emotion and mind. That model denotes a variable pattern
of psycho-physiological reactions to one awareness or another and
implies "localization of mental activity [producing such responses as
distress, anger or triumph] in the midsection of the body, usually in
the chest, and sometimes in the abdomen, but not in the brain" (6).
"Hydraulic" comes to mind because such reactions involve felt pressure
rising or falling, as though in a heated or cooling container. This is
a folk model taken literally. It is widespread in the pre-Christian,
classical world, in the Hebrew Bible and in medieval Irish, Old Norse
and Old Saxon literature--something Lockett compelling shows. Taken
literally, the language involved is little affected, if at all, by
Neoplatonic concepts of the soul and of increasingly abstracted
cognition.</p>
    <p>Half of Lockett's analytically satisfying study sets out the presence
of this largely emotional psychology--not a dynamic or depth
psychology--in a wide array of texts from Anglo-Saxon England as well
as cross-culturally. Half again focuses on the absence of a competitor
model drawn from Christian Neoplatonism. Along the way, Lockett covers
distinctions between the corporeal and non-corporeal as set out in
elementary grammatical study and in Latin riddles. Abstractions are
incorporeal, as is the unitary soul. Here she concludes, again, that
the hydraulic model is not displaced by Anglo-Saxon schooling or by
the instructions offered late, as by Alcuin, from the perspective of
an Augustinian or otherwise learned conception of the soul and of an
interior spark--that is, of intellectus and an interior light guiding
successively abstracted stages of cognition to an at least partial
vision of the forms underlying concepts and the classes of things.
Between Bede's time and Alcuin's such conceptions were available only
to a few, elite thinkers in a few centers. As Lockett gathers in her
invaluable review, drawing upon studies by Michael Lapidge and others,
the books most Anglo-Saxons had available to them do not reflect
widespread dissemination of Christian Neoplatonism.  Indeed, "every
available form of evidence points" away from general access to
libraries like Bede's or Alcuin's (181).  After surveying several
traditions, especially Platonic and Stoical thought in Christian
circles, Lockett eventually concludes that the "lesser lights of
Anglo-Saxon literary history," such as writers of poetry or homilies
or prose hagiographies, learned about the soul, in all periods, and at
all levels of education, mainly from Gregory's <italic>Dialogi</italic> and
Isidore of Seville (224).</p>
    <p><italic>Anglo-Saxon Psychologies</italic> improves upon the significant work of
Malcolm Godden, Antonina Harbus, Britt Mize, Eric Jager, Soon Ai Low,
and Michael Matto by being impressively comprehensive in its overview
of poetry and prose and of the Latin inheritance traceable in Anglo-
Saxon England. The book's range and detail are extraordinary. No
Anglo-Saxonist's library should be without this 495-page study. That
said, this reviewer wishes for a better phrase than the rather
unfortunate "hydraulic model," calling up, as it does, notions of
water or some other liquid flowing in tubes or containers under
pressure. What kind of mind is that, one might ask, if understood as
fluid mechanics?  Perhaps a "cardio-centric" model is a better phrase,
appearing often in Lockett's study. If so, one could say the Anglo-
Saxons had a cardio-centric theory of awareness and response, of
course contained in the chest, involving constriction at times,
heating up, as well as felt expansion. Such embodied notions express
physiological sensations related to, or experienced while in, distress
or else in some other sort of high, emotional state, such as anger or
excitement. A sense of seething and welling up might accompany intense
emotion, as when Beowulf's breast swells in anger and he lets loose a
shout against the dragon (line 2550 and following). For most Anglo-
Saxons, it would seem, strong feeling and thought are localized in the
chest mainly, certainly not in the brain. Wisdom is in the breast,
where thoughts are, says an Anglo-Saxon maxim. And the wise Man, we
are told, sits separately at counsel, he who holds in his faith; he
does not readily make known the sorrow in his breast, unless he
already knows how bravely to work a remedy (see "The Wanderer," ll.
111–114). As Lockett shows, for Anglo-Saxons reason and emotion are
not clearly differentiated classes of thought having different bodily
seats. One might consider, then, how some forms of monstrousness may
have struck those conversant with texts such as <italic>The Wonders of the
East</italic>. Could the eight by eight men without heads, who have eyes
and mouth in their chests, be an uncanny, literalized self-image (see
paragraph 15 in Andy Orchard's text, found in <italic>Pride and
Prodigies</italic>)? Such "men" are grotesquely misshapen, but somehow,
psychologically, the hybrid sensory and emotional monster, emergent
from within, might feel quite familiar to cardio-centric, Anglo-Saxon
minds.</p>
    <p>Lockett's study is amply and generously footnoted, with copious
citations to secondary sources as well as to all of the primary ones.
The index, however, omits the secondary sources, which, if present,
would aid any curious reader interested in the small details of
scholarly progress.
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</article>
