Expectations of romance : the reception of a genre in medieval England

書誌事項

Expectations of romance : the reception of a genre in medieval England

Melissa Furrow

(Studies in medieval romance / series editors, Roger Dalrymple, Corinne Saunders, 11)

D.S. Brewer, 2009

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注記

Bibliography: p. 241-255

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

What did medieval readers think of romance? Their attitudes to it, and the implications for the genre, are explored in this provocative study. An important and powerful meditation on romance genre, reception and ethical/moral purpose -- amongst many other aspects of romance. Professor ROBERT ROUSE, University of British Columbia. Medieval readers, like modern ones, differed in whether they saw "noble storie, and worthie for to drawen to memorie" in romance, or "drasty rymyng, nat worth a toord". This book tackles the task of discerning what were the medieval expectations of the genrein England: the evidence, and the implications. Safe for monastic, trained readers, romances provided moral examples. But not all readers saw that role as valid, desirable, or to the point, and not all readers were monks. Working from what was central to medieval readers' concept of the genre from the twelfth century onward, the book sees the changing linguistic, literary, religious and political contexts through such heterogeneous lenses as Denis Piramus, Robert Manning, and Walter Map; Guy of Warwick and Guenevere; chansons de geste and fabliaux; Tristram and Isolde and John Gower's uses of the pair as exemplary; Geoffrey Chaucer as reader and writer ofromance; and the Lollards, clergy, and didacts of the fifteenth century. MELISSA FURROW is Professor of English at Dalhousie University.

目次

The Problem with Romance The Name and the Genre Genres, Language, and Literary History The Example of Tristram and Isolde Making Free with the Truth Coda: The Reception of a Genre Appendix: Romances and the Male Regular Clergy by Order Bibliography

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