Description

Book Synopsis
Essays addressing the relation of aesthetic artistry to historical context in medieval English narrative.A collection of essays offering original arguments in a number of areas. Papers cluster around two topics: the writing of Langland and Chaucer, and writing as historical process. These reflect Frank's own wide-ranging work. The papers contain a refreshing ideological diversity while maintaining coherence of intellectual concerns. There is a discussion of the working of memory in The Knight's Tale. On debt, on Langland's Christology and on revelry, some very interesting ideas are put foward. In addition, literary contexts for the two major poets are usefully and thoroughly mapped out, and three papers illustrate how historical events and processes may be perceived in stimulatingly different ways. Included is an introduction from the editor and bibliography of Robert Worth Frank, Jnr. Contributors: ELIZABETH KIRK, C. DAVID BENSON, ANNA BALDWIN, M.TERESA TAVORMINA, MONICA McALPINE, MARY CARRUTHERS, KATHRYN L. LYNCH, CAROLYN P. COLLETTE, MARY HAMEL, PAUL STROHM, THOMAS J. HEFFERMAN, PEGGY KNAPP

Table of Contents
Editor's introduction, Robert R. Edwards; a bibliography of Robert Wirth Frank, Jr.; the frustration of narrative and the reader in "Piers Plowman", C. David Benson; Langland's narrative christology, Elizabeth Kirk; the debt narrative in "Piers Plowman", Anna Baldwin; the chilling of charity - eschatological allusions and revisions in "Piers Plowman" C.16-17, M. Teresa Tavormina; the triumph of fiction in the nun's priest's tale, Monica E. McAlpine; seeing things - locational memory in Chaucer's knight's tale, Mary Carruthers; partitioned fictions - the meaning and importance of walls in Chaucer's poetry, Kathryn L. Lynch; Chaucer's discourse of mariology - gaining the right to speak, Carolyn P. Collette; the "Descriptio Navalis Pugnae" in Middle English literature, Mary Hamel; "Lad with revel to Newegate" - Chaucerian narrative and historical meta-narrative, Paul Strohm; "God hathe schewed ffor him many grete miracules" - political canonization and the "Miracula" of Simone de Montfort, Thomas J. Hefferman; thrift, Peggy A. Knapp.

Art and Context in Late Medieval English Narrati

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A Hardback by Robert R. Edwards

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    View other formats and editions of Art and Context in Late Medieval English Narrati by Robert R. Edwards

    Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
    Publication Date: 14/07/1994
    ISBN13: 9780859914079, 978-0859914079
    ISBN10: 0859914070

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Essays addressing the relation of aesthetic artistry to historical context in medieval English narrative.A collection of essays offering original arguments in a number of areas. Papers cluster around two topics: the writing of Langland and Chaucer, and writing as historical process. These reflect Frank's own wide-ranging work. The papers contain a refreshing ideological diversity while maintaining coherence of intellectual concerns. There is a discussion of the working of memory in The Knight's Tale. On debt, on Langland's Christology and on revelry, some very interesting ideas are put foward. In addition, literary contexts for the two major poets are usefully and thoroughly mapped out, and three papers illustrate how historical events and processes may be perceived in stimulatingly different ways. Included is an introduction from the editor and bibliography of Robert Worth Frank, Jnr. Contributors: ELIZABETH KIRK, C. DAVID BENSON, ANNA BALDWIN, M.TERESA TAVORMINA, MONICA McALPINE, MARY CARRUTHERS, KATHRYN L. LYNCH, CAROLYN P. COLLETTE, MARY HAMEL, PAUL STROHM, THOMAS J. HEFFERMAN, PEGGY KNAPP

    Table of Contents
    Editor's introduction, Robert R. Edwards; a bibliography of Robert Wirth Frank, Jr.; the frustration of narrative and the reader in "Piers Plowman", C. David Benson; Langland's narrative christology, Elizabeth Kirk; the debt narrative in "Piers Plowman", Anna Baldwin; the chilling of charity - eschatological allusions and revisions in "Piers Plowman" C.16-17, M. Teresa Tavormina; the triumph of fiction in the nun's priest's tale, Monica E. McAlpine; seeing things - locational memory in Chaucer's knight's tale, Mary Carruthers; partitioned fictions - the meaning and importance of walls in Chaucer's poetry, Kathryn L. Lynch; Chaucer's discourse of mariology - gaining the right to speak, Carolyn P. Collette; the "Descriptio Navalis Pugnae" in Middle English literature, Mary Hamel; "Lad with revel to Newegate" - Chaucerian narrative and historical meta-narrative, Paul Strohm; "God hathe schewed ffor him many grete miracules" - political canonization and the "Miracula" of Simone de Montfort, Thomas J. Hefferman; thrift, Peggy A. Knapp.

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