The Book of John Mandeville Quotes

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The Book of John Mandeville: with Related Texts (Hackett Classics) The Book of John Mandeville: with Related Texts by John Mandeville
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“The Book of John Mandeville is a forgery—and the deceit is not redeemed by calling the work a “romance of travel,”1 since it presents itself as historical.”
John Mandeville, The Book of John Mandeville: with Related Texts
“one might argue that the Mandeville author’s original deception was not a simple trick for its own sake, but rather that it allowed him the freedom to speak his mind in a society that did not encourage such expression: to critique the moral state of his fellow Christians through an unusually open-minded presentation of the sectarian Christian and non-Christian world beyond Latin Christendom,2 an open-mindedness extended to nearly every group except the Jews and some nomads like the Bedouins. If so, the deception can be considered akin to the sort of literary device used by his near contemporary, William Langland, who, to obtain similar critical freedom, couched his impassioned critique of Christendom in an allegorical dream vision called Piers Plowman (five of whose some fifty surviving copies are bound with TBJM, suggesting that they have concerns in common).3”
Iain Macleod Higgins, The Book of John Mandeville: with Related Texts