Literary practice and social change in Britain, 1380-1530
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Literary practice and social change in Britain, 1380-1530
(The new historicism : studies in cultural poetics / Stephen Greenblatt, general editor, 8)
University of California Press, c1990
Available at 23 libraries
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Note
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
As a traditional site of historicist practice, medieval studies is particularly well-placed to benefit from the recent reemergence of historicism in literary studies. But this new "critical historicism" is different in both method and interests from past forms of historicist work. The differences are well illustrated by this collection. The concern with politics, the reliance on the materials of economic and social history, the conception of writing as a form of social practice, the focus upon the forces of change in medieval culture, the unwillingness to observe the usual distinction between literary and historical texts, and the historicization of their own practice these characteristics make the publication of these essays a significant event for medieval studies.
Table of Contents
Anne Middleton, William Langland's "Kynde Name": Authorial Signature and Social Identity in Late Fourteenth-Century England Paul Strohm, Politics and Poetics: Usk and Chaucer in the 1380s Lee Patterson,"No man his reson herde": Peasant Consciousness, Chaucer's Miller, and the Structure of the CANTERBURY TALES David Wallace, "When she translated was":A Chaucerian Critique of the Petrarchan Academy Larry Scanlon, The Kings Two Voices: Narrative and Power in Hoccleve's REGIMENT OF PRINCES Theresa Coletti, Reading REED: History and the Records of Early English Drama Louise Fradenburg, Narrative and Capital in Late Medieval Scotland
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