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Böcker i Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature-serien

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  • - Constructing a Medieval Literary Archive
    av Lawrence (King's College London) Warner
    516,-

    Lawrence Warner explores the history of the production and reception of the great medieval poem, Piers Plowman. He examines the many ways in which scholars, editors and critics manufactured an archive, over 500 years, which was then regarded as providing factual data about the poem. This title is available as Open Access on Cambridge Books Online and via Knowledge Unlatched.

  • - Loss and Recovery in Medieval and Early Modern English Literature
    av Lee (University of Missouri & Columbia) Manion
    516,-

    This wide-ranging study is the first to demonstrate how English literature continued to engage with crusading from the medieval tales of Richard the Lionheart all the way to Shakespeare. It provides a richer understanding of the impact of the crusades on narrative patterns and the beginning of the modern era.

  • av Sara (University of Cambridge) Harris
    516 - 1 650,-

    This study discusses how depictions of etymology and ancient documents were employed by twelfth-century poets, translators, bureaucrats and historians to portray Britain's past. A series of detailed case studies demonstrate how the vernacular hence became an important site for the construction of dynastic, institutional and ethnic identities.

  • - English Manuscripts 1375-1510
    av Daniel (University of Oxford) Wakelin
    606 - 1 546,-

    Daniel Wakelin's authoritative survey of manuscripts and their corrections combines challenging ideas about medieval scribes and about medieval attitudes to literature. Focusing particularly on the works of Chaucer, Hoccleve and Lydgate, this book will change the way in which both medieval literature and the history of the book are studied.

  • av Massachusetts) Greene & Virginie (Harvard University
    516,-

    Virginie Greene explores the influence of philosophy and logic on major works of medieval literature, including those by Anselm of Canterbury, Abelard, and Chretien de Troyes. Greene examines these Old French 'logical fictions' as essential objects of thought and modes of thinking in Western philosophy.

  • - Language Structures and Theories, 500-1500
     
    960,-

    A comprehensive account of the English language from 500 to 1500, which integrates literary and linguistic approaches to explore how we think about language. Drawing on a wide range of examples, this collection of essays by leading academics is accessible to scholars and students of medieval English language, literature, and history.

  • - Imagining Time from the Medieval to the Early Modern Period
     
    516,-

    Romance is often thought to be largely removed from the concerns of history. This wide-ranging collection of essays by eminent scholars challenges this view by offering the first comprehensive investigation of the fascinating interplay between romance and history from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance.

  • - The Pursuit of a Medieval Meter
    av Ian (Loyola University Cornelius
    1 252,99,-

    Recent studies of Beowulf, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, and Piers Plowman point towards a new understanding of English literary history in the Middle Ages. This book explains why alliterative meter has resisted modern efforts at comprehension, how it differed from accentual-syllabic forms, and why it died out.

  • - Cultural Approaches
     
    466,-

    An important collection of essays by expert scholars in the field that explores the impact of the recent shift towards cultural approaches to manuscript studies. It offers practical and theoretical analysis of the medieval manuscript book in its cultural contexts, from production to transmission to its continued adaptation.

  •  
    1 730,-

    The first comprehensive study of how European books were made and used in the historical period known as the 'long twelfth century' (1075-1225). The book takes a multidisciplinary approach, blending book history (codicology, palaeography, art-history) and contextual studies (reading, libraries) with text-based investigations in such fields as medicine, classics, and philosophy.

  • av Jonathan Morton
    1 116,-

    Focusing on one of the most influential poems in the European literary tradition, this collection brings together specialised chapters on medieval intellectual history, legal history, psychology, ethics, and logic. Re-evaluates the significance of the Roman de la Rose: indispensable reading for literary specialists and intellectual historians.

  • - Language Structures and Theories, 500-1500
     
    516,-

    A comprehensive account of the English language from 500 to 1500, which integrates literary and linguistic approaches to explore how we think about language. Drawing on a wide range of examples, this collection of essays by leading academics is accessible to scholars and students of medieval English language, literature, and history.

  • - Imagining the Civic Role of the Poet in Fourteenth-Century Italy
    av David G. (University of Notre Dame Lummus
    1 116,-

    This book is for students and scholars of medieval literature and for readers interested in the public intellectuals of the past. It provides new accounts of major authors like Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio, and invites readers to make comparisons with current debates about the public humanities.

  • av Irina (Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universitat Bonn) Dumitrescu
    526 - 1 446,-

    This engaging study explores how early medieval writers reflected on the nature of education and the acquisition of wisdom. By studying representations of teaching and learning in five early English texts, Irina Dumitrescu sheds light on the underappreciated emotional and cognitive complexities of Anglo-Saxon instruction.

  •  
    516,-

    This collection conducts an intersectional investigation of affects, feelings, and emotions in non-religious late Middle English literatures. From Geoffrey Chaucer to Gavin Douglas, eight chapters by leading scholars examine the coexistence of emotion and affect in Late Medieval representations of feeling.

  •  
    606,-

    The first comprehensive study of how European books were made and used in the historical period known as the 'long twelfth century' (1075-1225). The book takes a multidisciplinary approach, blending book history (codicology, palaeography, art-history) and contextual studies (reading, libraries) with text-based investigations in such fields as medicine, classics, and philosophy.

  •  
    516,-

    This exploration of literary form in the works of Geoffrey Chaucer delivers a timely and fresh approach to the study of one of the best known medieval English poets. This definitive collection of essays offers a variety of approaches to Chaucer and to the analysis of form.

  • - Place, Texts and Ascetic Tradition, 690-1500
    av Christiania Whitehead
    390 - 1 116,-

    Introduces readers interested in insular spirituality and hagiography to the major texts associated with the cult of the great northern English saint, Cuthbert. The first sustained analysis of this textual tradition from 690-1500, emphasizing his ascetic evolution, and association with changing perceptions of northernness and nationhood.

  • - Retying the Bonds
    av Berkeley) Wellendorf & Jonas (University of California
    516 - 1 336,-

    The first monograph in English on the medieval Scandinavian reception and re-interpretation of pre-Christian Scandinavian religion. Contextualizes the canonical Prose Edda by drawing on a range of less well known texts. Translations are provided of all quotations from medieval texts.

  • - Late Medieval Medical, Religious and Literary Traditions
    av Katie L. (University of Sussex) Walter
    516,-

    Through new readings of canonical Middle English texts in relation to broader traditions and practices of the body and the senses, knowledge and ethics, this study offers an original contribution towards a history both of the human body and of medieval Christianity.

  • - London Textual Production, 1384-1432
    av Lawrence (King's College London) Warner
    516,-

    The importance of scribes in the production of Chaucer's poetry has become increasingly apparent. Challenging widely accepted narratives and conclusions of recent scholarship through meticulously detailed argument, Lawrence Warner delivers an important intervention in the field of Middle English studies.

  • av Decatur) Meyer-Lee & Robert J. (Agnes Scott College
    516,-

    Focusing on the Clerk, Merchant, Franklin and Squire sequence in The Canterbury Tales, this book explores Chaucer's meditation on the fraught relation between the value of literature and the values underlying various non-literary ways of earning a living. It will appeal to scholars and students of medieval studies.

  •  
    1 046,-

    The contributors to this volume offer a ground-breaking investigation into the birth of new literatures in the vernacular languages of medieval Europe. Essential for scholars of medieval literature, the book opens new perspectives for specialists in specific languages and national literatures through a comparative, transnational approach.

  • av Orietta (University of Cambridge) Da Rold
    506 - 1 116,-

  • av Olivia Holmes
    1 186,-

    "This is the first monograph to provide a comprehensive interpretation of the Decameron's response to classical and medieval didactic traditions. Olivia Holmes unearths the rich variety of Boccaccio's sources, ranging across Aesopic fables, narrative collections of Islamicate origin, sermon-stories and saints' lives, and compilations of historical anecdotes. Examining the Decameron's sceptical and sexually permissive contents in relation to medieval notions of narrative exemplarity, the study also considers how they intersect with current critical assertions of fiction's power to develop empathy and emotional intelligence. Holmes argues that Boccaccio provides readers with the opportunity to exercise both what the ancients called "Ethics," and our contemporaries call "Theory of Mind." This account of a vast tradition of tale collections and its provocative analysis of their workings will appeal to scholars of Italian literature and medieval studies, as well as to readers interested in evolutionary understandings of storytelling"--

  • av Richard Matthew Pollard
    396,-

  • av David G Lummus
    390,-

  • av Andrew (Trinity University Kraebel
    390,-

  • av George (University of St Andrews Corbett
    336,-

  • av Mark (Trinity College Dublin) Faulkner
    1 046,-

    This is the first book-length study of English writing in the period between Old and Middle English. For lecturers and students alike, it reveals exactly what happened to English in a period necessarily covered on introductory literary history courses and on courses in the history of the English language.

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