The Locator -- [(subject = "Authorship--History")]

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Author:
Critten, Rory G., author.
Title:
Author, scribe, and book in late medieval English literature / Rory G. Critten.
Publisher:
D. S. Brewer,
Copyright Date:
2018
Description:
xii, 226 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Subject:
Hoccleve, Thomas,--1370?-1450--Criticism and interpretation.
Kempe, Margery,--approximately 1373---Criticism and interpretation.
Audelay, John,--active 1426--Criticism and interpretation.
Charles,--d'Orléans,--1394-1465--Criticism and interpretation.
Audelay, John,--active 1426.
Charles,--d'Orléans,--1394-1465.
Hoccleve, Thomas,--1370?-1450?
Kempe, Margery,--approximately 1373-
English literature--Middle English, 1100-1500--History and criticism.
Authorship--History--To 1500.
Manuscripts, English (Middle)--History.
Rhetoric, Medieval.
Authorship.
English literature--Middle English.
Manuscripts, English (Middle)
Rhetoric, Medieval.
To 1500
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
History.
Notes:
Include bibliographical references (pages 192-216) and index.
Contents:
Introduction: Towards a History of the Self-Publishing Pose -- 1. "Yit ful fayn wolde I haue a messageer / To recommande me": Thomas Hoccleve's Autography Books in Fifteenth-Century London and Westminister -- 2. "He Red it ouyr...Sche Sum-tym Helpyng": Collaborating on the Book of Margery Kempe -- 3. "This boke I made with gret dolour": The Pains of Writing in John the Blind Audelay's Poems and Carols -- 4. "Considering the grete subtilite and cauteleux disposition of the said Duc of Orlians": The Political Valence of Charles d'Orleans's English Book of Love.
Summary:
Thomas Hoccleve, Margery Kempe, John Audelay, and Charles d'Orléans present themselves as the makers not only of their texts, but also of the books that transmitted their writing. This new study argues that they elaborated a 'self-publishing pose' with the aim of regaining their audiences' confidence in the face of the compromised social, physical, and material conditions they inhabited. Dr. Critten shows that while the strategies of self-presentation that these authors develop draw on trends in contemporary literature and book history (such as the proliferation of the 'go, litel bok' motif and the increasing popularity of the single-author codex), their approach to writing differs fundamentally from that pursued by their immediate predecessors, Chaucer and Gower, and by their most prominent peer, Lydgate. Rather, in their unusual insistence on their co-identity with their manuscripts, they demonstrate a new awareness of the socially instrumental potential of Middle English writing--back cover.
ISBN:
9781843845058
1843845059
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1033789429
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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