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Medievalism's inheritance: Early inventions of medieval pasts.
详细信息   
  • 作者:Peebles ; Katie Lyn.
  • 学历:Doctor
  • 年:2010
  • 导师:Bauman, Richard,eadvisorIngham, Patricia Clare,eadvisorAnderson, Judith H.ecommittee memberDolby, Sandra K.ecommittee member
  • 毕业院校:Indiana University
  • Department:English
  • ISBN:9781124075082
  • CBH:3409779
  • Country:USA
  • 语种:English
  • FileSize:3383698
  • Pages:322
文摘
This dissertation examines how and why medievalism---the use of elements from the European Middle Ages in social commentary---began in the Middle Ages itself. Medievalism is usually considered to have germinated in the Renaissance and flowered in the nineteenth century, but English writers could articulate a clear, irrevocable separation from shortly after the Norman Conquest onwards. This project combines historiographic literary analysis and manuscript research with theories of heritage construction, the invention of traditions, and language ideologies. Each chapter focuses on an author experiencing political crisis: William of Malmesbury (c.1095--c.1143), John Gower (c.1330--1408), Sir Thomas Malory (c.1405--1471), and John Aubrey (1626--1697). These writers constructed medieval heritages out of available historical fragments, narratives, and their own dreams in order to resolve contemporary issues. Studying nascent medievalism in four periods (the Anglo-Norman civil war, the troubled reign and usurpation of Richard II, the Wars of the Roses, and the seventeenth-century Civil Wars) emphasizes the complexity of medieval pasts repeatedly invented to focus on the anxieties of each period. The comparison of issues negotiated through medievalism at different moments of cultural rupture reveals the gradual crystallization of assumptions leading into modern medievalism. The basic process of "medieval" medievalism is the same as the process that has been established in post-medieval periods: to make the past instrumental in cultural debates, these writers compared the terms of the chosen medieval period to the immediate concerns of the present. However, early medievalism is more weighted to a search for continuity and metaphorical constructions of cultural heritage in order to naturalize certain kinds of violence and mitigate losses of the past. William of Malmesbury and John Gower make lessons from the past obvious in attempts to secure a more peaceful future. Both Malory and Caxton were concerned with asserting a stable transmission of heritage that could transcend cycles of violence and limits of the book marketplace. Aubrey's use of medievalism in early modern scientific historical projects set a pattern for the continued intimacy of heritage and folklore studies, and of medievalism and medieval studies.

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