Medieval English PoetryStephanie Trigg Longman, 1993 - 299 The essays in this volume consider a range of poetic texts written in England between the twelfth and fifteenth centuries, with the exception of works by Chaucer, and represent some of the exciting new developments in medieval studies over the last twenty years. The collection explores and interrogates the established canon of Middle English poetry and includes several studies of two major poems, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and Piers Plowman, and essays on some less well-known works, including Havelok the Dane, The Owl and the Nightingale and The Flower and the Leaf. In a field that has been dominated by historical scholarship and conservative new criticism, Medieval English Poetry brings together some of the most controversial work currently being done in Middle English studies; this collection reveals the strength and depth of this research in feminist, Marxist, historicist, reader-response and deconstructionist method. It includes contributions from David Aers, Sheila Delany, Anne Middleton, and Lee Patterson. Stephanie Trigg's illuminating introduction examines some of the patterns that have emerged in the criticism of medieval literature this century, and pays particular attention to our constructions and definitions of the 'medieval'. The range of material covered, together with the detailed headnotes to each of the thirteen essays and the guide to further reading, make this book essential reading for all undergraduate and postgraduate students of Medieval English Literature. |
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Strona 94
... become a simple reversal of dialectical hierarchies that privilege meaninglessness over meaning . The allegory of Piers Plowman – its reflexive questioning – is both an attempt to represent what is unrepresentable and an attempt to ...
... become a simple reversal of dialectical hierarchies that privilege meaninglessness over meaning . The allegory of Piers Plowman – its reflexive questioning – is both an attempt to represent what is unrepresentable and an attempt to ...
Strona 95
... becomes an elaborate metonymy for the tree of knowledge ( the paradisaical lignum vitae ) and the tree of the cross ... become ' another ; his name comprehends multiple meanings , none of which – not even Petrus id est christus – is ...
... becomes an elaborate metonymy for the tree of knowledge ( the paradisaical lignum vitae ) and the tree of the cross ... become ' another ; his name comprehends multiple meanings , none of which – not even Petrus id est christus – is ...
Strona 214
... become ' synonymous , homonymous , anonymous ' , and the narrator innominate because ' there is no guarantee that he does not have two [ names ] . . . ' ( p . 163 ) . This concern of Derrida's for the dissolution of jurisdictions – over ...
... become ' synonymous , homonymous , anonymous ' , and the narrator innominate because ' there is no guarantee that he does not have two [ names ] . . . ' ( p . 163 ) . This concern of Derrida's for the dissolution of jurisdictions – over ...
Spis treści
Defining the medieval and the medievalist | 8 |
Contemporary criticism | 15 |
Richard II | 24 |
Prawa autorskie | |
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AERS allegory Alliterative Morte Arthure argues Arthurian authority authorship ballad becomes Canterbury Tales century Chaucer Christian commentary common Confessio Amantis contemporary context criticism cultural debate discussion divine dream economic Elf-Knight episode essay ethical example female feminist fiction Fierabras genre Geoffrey girdle Green Knight Guenevere Havelok historical human ideology Incarnation interpretation Jill Mann John Gower king kynde labour Lady Langland language Latin LIEK lines literary London manuscript meaning Mede medieval literature Medieval Poetry medieval studies merchants Middle Ages Middle English modern moral Morgan narrative narrator narrator's Nightingale Oxford Passus peasant pentangle Piers Plowman Piers's poem poem's poet poet's poetic poetry political present Prologue prys question reader reading represent rhetorical romance satire seems sense sexual significance Sir Gawain social structure suggests textual theory traditional truth University Press vision voice Waster Wastoure Winner and Waster woman women words writing Wynnere þat þis