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Answerable Style: The Idea of the Literary in Medieval England

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Edited by Frank Grady and Andrew Galloway
2013
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summary
Renewed interest in aesthetics, in form, and the idea of the literary has led some scholars to announce the arrival of a “new formalism,” but the provisional histories of such a critical rebirth tend to begin well after the beginning, paying scant attention to medieval literary scholarship, much less the Middle Ages. The essays in Answerable Style: The Idea of the Literary in Medieval England offer a collective rebuke to the assumption that any such aesthetic turn can succeed without careful attention to the history and criticism of “the medieval literary.” Taking as their touchstone the influential work of Anne Middleton, whose searching explorations of the dialectical intersection of form and history in Middle English writing lie at the heart of the medievalist’s literary critical enterprise, the essays in this volume address the medieval idea of the literary, with special focus on the poetry of Chaucer, Langland, and Gower. The essays, by a notable array of medievalists, range from the “contact zones” between clerical culture and vernacular writing, to manuscript study and its effects on the modalities of “persona” and voicing, to the history of emotion as a basis for new literary ideals, to the reshapings of the genre of tragedy in response to late-medieval visions of history, and finally to the relations between poets writing in different medieval vernaculars. With this unusually broad yet thematically complementary set of essays, Answerable Style offers a set of key critical and historical reference points for questions currently preoccupying literary study.

Table of Contents

Cover

pp. 1-1

Title Page, Copyright

pp. 2-5

Contents

pp. v-vi

Illustrations

pp. vii-9

Introduction

pp. 1-12

Part I.

One: Horace’s Ars poetica in the Medieval Classroom and Beyond

pp. 15-33

Two: Latin Composition Lessons, Piers Plowman, and the Piers Plowman Tradition*

pp. 34-53

Three: Langland Translating

pp. 54-74

Four: Escaping the Whirling Wicker

pp. 75-94

Five: Langland’s Literary Syntax, Or Animaas an Alternative to Latin Grammar

pp. 95-120

Six: Speculum Vitae and the Form of Piers Plowman

pp. 121-139

Seven: Petrarch’s Pleasures, Chaucer’s Revulsions, and the Aesthetics of Renunciation in Late-Medieval Culture

pp. 140-166

Part II.

Eight: Chaucer’s History-Effect

pp. 169-194

Nine: Seigneurial Poetics, or The Poacher, the Prikasour, The Hunt, and Its Oeuvre

pp. 195-213

Ten: Agency and the Poetics of Sensation in Gower’s Mirour de l’Omme*

pp. 214-243

Eleven: Troilus and Criseyde*

pp. 244-262

Twelve: The Silence of Langland’s Study*

pp. 263-283

Thirteen: Voice and Public Interiorities

pp. 284-306

Works Cited

pp. 307-331

Index

pp. 333-341
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