Invention and Authorship in Medieval England

Invention and Authorship in Medieval England

by Robert R. Edwards
Invention and Authorship in Medieval England

Invention and Authorship in Medieval England

by Robert R. Edwards

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Overview

From the twelfth century onwards, medieval English writers adapted the conventions of high literary culture to establish themselves as recognized authors and claim a significant place for works of imagination beside those of doctrine and instruction. Their efforts extended over three languages—Latin, French, and English—and across a discontinuous literary history. Their strategy was to approach authorship as a field of rhetorical invention rather than a fixed institution. Consequently, their work is at once revisionary and ambivalent. Writers conspicuously position themselves within tradition, exploit the resources of poetic belatedness, and negotiate complex relations to their audiences and social authority.
 
 
Authorial invention in the Middle Ages is the base of a national tradition that English writers in the Renaissance saw as stable and capable of emulating the canons of classical languages and the Italian and French vernaculars. In Invention and Authorship in Medieval England, Robert R. Edwards brings new interpretive perspectives to Walter Map, Marie de France, John Gower, Geoffrey Chaucer, Thomas Hoccleve, and John Lydgate. He offers a critical reading of key moments that define the emergence of medieval English authorship by showing how writers adapt the commonplaces of authorship to define themselves and their works externally and to construct literary meaning internally. 
 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814275092
Publisher: Ohio State University Press
Publication date: 07/18/2017
Series: Interventions: New Studies Medieval Cult
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 272
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Robert R. Edward's is Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Pennsylvania State University.

Table of Contents

Invention and Authorship in Medieval England Half Title Page Title Page Copyright Dedication CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS INTRODUCTION RECOVERING MEDIEVAL AUTHORSHIP AUTHORSHIP AND LITERARY HISTORY PART 1: Inventions PRELUDE: Bede and the Denial of Authorship CHAPTER 1: Walter Map: Authorship and Counter-Authorship “NUDUS PUGIL ET INERMIS”: MAP’S COUNTER-AUTHORSHIP “FRIUOLA NARRACIO”: THE MARGINS OF DISCOURSE MAP’S READERS ALLEGORIES OF AUTHORSHIP CHAPTER 2: Marie de France: Signature and Invention “BONE MATEIRE” AND THE FRAMES OF AUTHORSHIP “LE LIVRE OVIDE” “MUT FU DELITUSE LA VIE” IMPOSSIBLE DESIRE PART 2: Authorship Direct and Oblique CHAPTER 3: John Gower: Scriptor, Compositor, Auctor MIROUR DE L’OMME VOX CLAMANTIS CONFESSIO AMANTIS GOWER’S PARATEXTS GOWER’S SECOND CURSUS CHAPTER 4: Geoffrey Chaucer: Imitation and Refusal CONTEMPORARY RECEPTION AUTHORIAL CATALOGUES AUCTOURS AND AUCTORITEE AUTHORSHIP AND VERNACULAR IMITATION “OLDE STORIES”: AUTHORSHIP AND WRITING ANTIQUITY “I SPEKE HIR WORDES PROPRELY”: THE CANTERBURY TALES PART 3: Constructing a Canon CHAPTER 5: Simulating Authorship: Thomas Hoccleve and John Lydgate FICTIONS OF PATRONAGE CHAPTER 6: Thomas Hoccleve: “Sum of the doctrine” CHAPTER 7: John Lydgate and the “Stile Counterfet” AFTERWORD: The Afterlife of Medieval Authorship PRIMARY SOURCES SECONDARY SOURCES INDEX INTERVENTIONS: NEW STUDIES IN MEDIEVAL CULTURE: Ethan Knapp, Series Editor
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