An Open Access Review Journal Encouraging Critical Engagement with the Continuing Process of Inventing the Middle Ages

February 9, 2022

Nadja Leonhard-Hooper: The Collision; Amanda Keating: The Martyrdom (2022)

Everything Old Is New Again—Hrotsvitha von Gandersheim on the Off-Broadway Stage:
A Review of Two Headed Rep’s Production of Nadja Leonhard-Hooper’s The Collision and Amanda Keating’s The Martyrdom at New York’s 59E59 Theaters.

Kevin J. Harty

La Salle University

harty@lasalle.edu

 

1501 Woodcut by Albrecht Dürer of Hrotsvitha

presenting a copy of her Gesta Oddonis to Emperor

Otto the Great as the Abbess Gerberga looks on.

 

The tenth-century German canoness, Hrotsvitha von Gandersheim, can lay claim to many firsts. Among other distinctions, she is the first Germanic woman writer. She is the first woman historian. She is the first writer since antiquity to compose dramas in Latin. She is the first woman Germanic poet. She is the first Western writer to comment on Islam.  But, despite these many accomplishments, we know little of the particulars of her life, other than that she was a canoness at the Benedictine Abbey in Gandersheim in the tenth century, that she was a pupil of the Abbess Gerberga, that she was well-informed about the politics of the Ottonian courts, and that her works—the so-called Liber Primus, Liber Secundus, and Liber Tertius—were either ignored or lost for half a millennium until they were published in an 1501 edition with woodcuts by Dürer. The Liber Primus (The Book of Legends) contains eight hagiographical legends. The Liber Secundus (The Book of Drama) contains six feminist Christian dramatic responses to the Roman comedies of Terence. The Liber Tertius contains two historical works. The first charts the rise of the Ottonian dynasty, while the second records the history of Gandersheim Abbey. Nadja Leonhard-Hooper’s The Collison imagines what the life of a cloistered medieval woman might have been like, and Amanda Keating’s The Martyrdom presents a new adaptation of what is generally considered Hrotsvitha’s funniest and most successful “comedy,” Dulcitius (the Passio Sanctarum Virginum Agapus Chioniae et Hirenae), about the martyrdom of three Christian virgins during the reign of the Emperor Diocletian.   

The Collison, and What Came After, or, Gunch is set in a tenth-century abbey in Grebenstein.  The abbey is poor, understaffed, and overshadowed by the nearby abbey of Gandersheim. There is, at least initially, an abbess, two nuns (Sister Anise and Sister Gudrun), and a troubled and troubling novice named Gunch (“How do you solve a problem like Gunch?”). The abbess seems a stern disciplinarian—a by-the-book kind of nun. Anise and Gudrun struggle to do their best. Gunch seems hopeless. She can neither read nor write, prizes her pet chicken, and seems more concerned with earthly pleasures than heavenly ones.  The abbey is also more than a bit of an also-ran.  Illuminated manuscript editions of the Bible fly out the doors of the abbey in Gandersheim—72 complete Bibles in three years.  Grebenstein’s record is only 69 such manuscripts.  Not helping matters is the fact that the plague has killed off a dozen nuns at Grebenstein, so the abbey is in danger of dissolution.

Gunch soon becomes central to the plot when a meteor falls from the sky and lands right on top of the abbess, whose remains—feet only displayed from under the edge of the meteor—suggest the fate of the Wicked Witch of the East after Dorothy’s house lands on her in The Wizard of Oz.  A second much smaller meteor than falls, lodging a triangular shard of rock into Gunch’s head.  After lingering for several days, Gunch dies, only to be almost immediately resurrected in what holds the potential for being a first-class miracle.  Resurrected Gunch is a nun on speed.  Suddenly she can read and write—and is ambidextrous. Using both hands, she copies and illuminates three complete Bible manuscripts in two days—“two pages per minute.”  So industrious does she become that the abbey runs out of vellum.  But further complicating matters is the fact that Gunch’s manuscripts deviate from the accepted Biblical narrative.  That she has the animals naming Adam—not vice versa—in a move reminiscent of Ursula Le Gunn’s 1985 short story, “She Unnames Them,” may be the least heretical, blasphemous, and plainly obscene textual emendation that she introduces into the copies of the Bible that she dashes off armed with a quill in each hand.

From the start, the play relies on farce and slapstick to propel its plot.  The resurrected Gunch only raises the comedic level.  The abbey has become a source of scandal to the villagers in Gandersheim, so the Bishop of Worms is headed to the abbey for a visitation meant to sort things out and to punish any offenders.