Description

Book Synopsis
Transfiguring medievalism combines medieval literature, modern poetry and theology to explore how bodies, including literary bodies, can become apparent to the attentive eye as more than they first appear. Transfiguration, traditionally understood as the revelation of divinity in community, becomes a figure for those splendors, mundane and divine, that await within the read, lived and loved world. Bringing together medieval sources with modern lyric medievalism, the book argues for the porousness of time and flesh, not only through the accustomed cadences of scholarly argumentation but also through its own moments of poetic reflection. In this way, Augustine, Cassian, Bernard of Clairvaux, Dante, Boccaccio and the heroes of Old French narrative, no more or less than their modern lyric counterparts, come to light in new and newly complicated ways.

Table of Contents

Prelude: Six days later

Introduction: Ave

1 Toward transfiguration
2 Saints, poets, and other crossover artists
3 Monastic poetics

Interlude 1: The question

4 Waiting for the Middle Ages
5 Bodies in waiting
6 Pas de deux

Interlude 2: Puking prayer

7 Lyric medievalism
8 Lyric theology

Interlude 3: Thomas is your boyfriend

9 Make me

Conclusion: Ecce

Index

Transfiguring Medievalism: Poetry, Attention, and

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    A Hardback by Cary Howie

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      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 10/12/2020
      ISBN13: 9781526148650, 978-1526148650
      ISBN10: 152614865X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Transfiguring medievalism combines medieval literature, modern poetry and theology to explore how bodies, including literary bodies, can become apparent to the attentive eye as more than they first appear. Transfiguration, traditionally understood as the revelation of divinity in community, becomes a figure for those splendors, mundane and divine, that await within the read, lived and loved world. Bringing together medieval sources with modern lyric medievalism, the book argues for the porousness of time and flesh, not only through the accustomed cadences of scholarly argumentation but also through its own moments of poetic reflection. In this way, Augustine, Cassian, Bernard of Clairvaux, Dante, Boccaccio and the heroes of Old French narrative, no more or less than their modern lyric counterparts, come to light in new and newly complicated ways.

      Table of Contents

      Prelude: Six days later

      Introduction: Ave

      1 Toward transfiguration
      2 Saints, poets, and other crossover artists
      3 Monastic poetics

      Interlude 1: The question

      4 Waiting for the Middle Ages
      5 Bodies in waiting
      6 Pas de deux

      Interlude 2: Puking prayer

      7 Lyric medievalism
      8 Lyric theology

      Interlude 3: Thomas is your boyfriend

      9 Make me

      Conclusion: Ecce

      Index

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