Online Library TheLib.net » Later Middle English literature, materiality, and culture: essays in honor of James M. Dean
Textual material. More than words can say?: Late Medieval affective vocabularies / Mark Amsler ; The motives of reeds: the wife of Bath{u2019}s Midas and literary tradition / Karla Taylor ; A taxonomy of Medieval English travel writings / Christian K. Zacher ; Lady Bertilak and the rhetoric of women in Sir Gawain and the green knight / Joseph Turner ; Anarchy in the UK: chaos and community in Late Medieval political writings / John M. Ganim ; Amans the memorious / R.F. Yeager -- Material texts. Ampullae and badges: pilgrim paraphernalia in Late Medieval England / Kathryn McKinley ; "Of crafty bildyng & werkyng most roial": Lydgate{u2019}s allusions to the crafts and the role of making in Medieval civic poetry / Scott Lightsey ; Read with your hands and not with your eyes: touching books of hours / Gabrielle Parkin ; The tales of two transactions: the franklin, the shipman, feudalism, and the Medieval Atlantic maritime world system / Craig E. Bertolet ; Owen Rogers and Piers Plowman{u2019}s Crede, 1561: a census of STC 19908 / Lawrence Warner.;"The essays in this volume consider the ways in which material and intellectual culture both shaped and were shaped by the literature of late medieval England. The first section, 'Textual Material,' reflects on cultural and social issues generally referred to as the History of Ideas, and how those ideas manifest in later medieval English texts. Essays address, for example, affect in The Book of Margery Kempe, rhetoric in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, anarchy in late medieval political texts, and temporality in Gower{u2019}s Confessio Amantis. The essays in the second section, 'Material Texts,' examine physical objects--from pilgrim badges, to manuscripts, to money, to early printed editions--and the cultural behaviors associated with them, interpreting these objects and exploring their connections to the important literary and political texts of the age such as Piers Plowman, Lydgate{u2019}s Troy Book, and Chaucer{u2019}s Canterbury Tales. All of the essays in this collection emerge from the relationships and connections between the issues that characterize Jim Dean{u2019}s work: the cultural, material, and aesthetic aspects of later medieval English literature. So too do they reflect a movement in medieval literary studies presaged by Dean{u2019}s career of scholarship and teaching, that critical approaches to literary texts are best undertaken with an understanding of the complex cultural and historical milieu that defines both the production of those texts and the production of our own work on those texts."--
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