Textual Subjectivity:The Encoding of Subjectivity in Medieval Narratives and Lyrics: The Encoding of Subjectivity in Medieval Narratives and Lyrics

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OUP Oxford, 27.10.2005 - 282 Seiten
This book investigates how subjectivity is encoded in the texts of a wide variety of medieval narratives and lyrics - not how they express the subjectivity of individuals, but how subjectivity, escaping the bounds of individuality, is incorporated in the linguistic fabric of their texts. Most of the poems discussed are in English, and the book includes analyses of Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde, Man of Law's Tale, and Complaint Unto Pity, the works of thePearl poet, Havelok the Dane, the lyric sequence attributed to Charles of Orleans (the earliest such sequence in English), and many anonymous poems. It also devotes sections to Ovid's Heroides and to poems by the troubadour Bernart de Ventadorn. For the first time, it brings to bear on medieval narratives and lyrics a body oftheory which denies the supposed necessity for literary texts to have narrators or 'speakers', and in doing so reveals the implausibilities into which a dogmatic assumption of this necessity has led much of the last century's criticism.

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Autoren-Profil (2005)


A. C. Spearing is Professor of English at the University of Virginia and Fellow of Queens' College, Cambridge.

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