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The Performance of Middle English Culture
Essays on Chaucer and the Drama in Honor of Martin Stevens
Edited by James J. Paxson
Edited by Lawrence M. Clopper
Edited by Sylvia Tomasch


Theatricality as a cultural process is vitally important in the middle ages; it encompasses not only the thematic importation of dramatic images into the Canterbury Tales, but also the social and ideological `performativities' of the mystery and morality plays, metadramatic investments, and the ludic energies of Chaucerian discourses in general. The twelve essays collected here address for the first time this intersection, using contemporary theory and historical scholarship to treat a number of important critical problems, including the anthropology of theatrical performance; gender; allegory; Chaucerian metapoetics; intertextual play and jouissance; social mediation and rhetoric; genre; and the institutionality of medieval studies. JAMES J. PAXSON is Associate Professor of English at the University of Florida; LAWRENCE M. CLOPPER is Professor of English at Indiana University; SYLVIA TOMASCHis Associate Professor of English at Hunter College, City University of New York. Contributors: KATHLEEN ASHLEY, MARLENE CLARK, RICHARD DANIELS, ALFRED DAVID, RICHARD K. EMMERSON, JOHN GANIM, WARREN GINSBERG, ROBERT W. HANNING, SHARON KRAUS, SETH LERER, WILLIAM MCLELLAN, PAMELA SHEINGORN, PETER W. TRAVIS

 

DETAILS

6 b/w illustrations
208 pages
Size: 23.4 x 15.6
13 digit ISBN: 9780859915274
Binding: Hardback
First published: 29/Oct/1998
Price: 95.00 USD / 50.00 GBP
Imprint: D. S. Brewer
Subject: Medieval Literature

BIC class: HRBQ53

STATUS: Out of stock
Details updated on 01/12/2008

Contents
   `Introduction'.
James J. Paxson
   `Sponsorship, Reflexivity and Resistance: A Cultural Reading of the York Cycle Plays'.
Kathleen M. Ashley
   `Eliding the `Medieval': Renaissance `New Historicism' and Sixteenth-Century Cycle Plays'.
Richard K. Emmerson
   ``Se in what stat thou doyst indwell': The Shifting Constructions of Gender and Power Relations in Wisdom'.
Marlene Clark
   ``Se in what stat thou doyst indwell''.
Sharon Kraus and Pamela Sheingorn
   `The Chaucerian Critique of Medieval Theatricality'.
Seth Lerer
   `The Experience of Modernity in Late Medieval Literature'.
John M Ganim
   `Noah's Wife's Flood'.
Alfred David
   `Textual Pleasure in The Miller's Tale'.
Richard J. Daniels
   `Petrarch, Chaucer and the Making of the Clerk'.
Warren Ginsberg
   `The Crisis of Mediation in Chaucer's `Troilus and Criseyde''.
Robert W Hanning
   `Reading Chaucer `Ab Ovo': Mock-Exemplum in the Nun's Priest's Tale'.
Peter W. Travis
   `A Postmodern Performance: Counter-Reading Chaucer's Clerk's Tale and maxine Hong Kingston's No Name Woman'.
William T. McClellan

Reviews
Stimulating and enjoyable. NOTES AND QUERIES



 

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