Vernacular Literary Theory from the French of Medieval England

Texts and Translations, c.1120-c.1450

Jocelyn Wogan-Browne editor Delbert W Russell editor Professor Thelma Fenster editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Boydell & Brewer Ltd

Published:21st Jul '16

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Vernacular Literary Theory from the French of Medieval England cover

Excerpts from texts (with translation) from the French of medieval England offer a guide to medieval literary theory. From the twelfth to the fifteenth centuries, French was one of England's main languages of literature, record, diplomacy and commerce and also its only supra-national vernacular. As is now recognised, the large corpus of England'sFrench texts and records is indispensable to understanding England's literary and cultural history, the multilingualism of early England, and European medieval French-language culture in general. This volume presents a full, representative collection of texts and facing translations from England's medieval French. Through its selection of prologues and other excerpts from works composed or circulating in England, the volume presents a body of vernacular literary theory, in which some fifty-five highly various texts, from a range of genres, discuss their own origins, circumstances, strategies, source materials, purposes and audiences. Each entry, newly edited from a single manuscript, is accompanied by a headnote, annotation, and narrative bibliography, while a general introduction and section introductions provide further context and information. Also included are essays on French in England and onthe prosody and prose of insular French; Middle English versions of some of the edited French texts; and a glossary of literary terms. By giving access to a literate culture hitherto available primarily only to Anglo-Norman specialists, this book opens up new possibilities for taking English francophony into account in research and teaching. Jocelyn Wogan-Browne is Thomas F.X. and Theresa Mullarkey Chair in Literature, Fordham University, New York, and formerly Professor of Medieval Literature, University of York; Thelma Fenster is Professor Emerita of French and Medieval Studies, Fordham University; Delbert Russell is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of French, University of Waterloo.

[C]ondenses and synthesizes a vast collection of past and current scholarship, uncovers a rich corpus of medieval vernacular literary theory, and opens new frontiers of inquiry. . . . A truly collaborative production combining the expertise and energy of established and emerging scholars. * H-FRANCE *
Demonstrates the wealth and vibrancy of the French of England [and] situates the French of medieval England as a vernacular that can no longer be dismissed or simply mentioned in passing if one wishes to understand the complex cultural landscape of medieval England.[I]ts impact will be long lasting in the field of medieval studies in England. * SCRIPTORIUM *
A landmark achievement in the on-going reassessment of the place of French in medieval English culture...For researchers interested in understanding medieval English literary culture in its multilingual totality, Vernacular Literary Theory from the French of Medieval England will be an indispensable resource. * ANGLIA *
A notable, even monumental, achievement.The editors should be congratulated on having produced an enormously valuable work of scholarship. * MEDIUM AEVUM *

ISBN: 9781843844297

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 1g

610 pages