Synopses & Reviews
This book offers a multi-faceted view on the wide variety of late-medieval writings on love with which it deals and seeks to respect and reflect their "gret diversite." Hence it represents an important and timely modification of the rather monolithic views on medieval writings on love which have prevailed ever since Lewis' Allegory of Love. The essays discuss issues such as the relevance or otherwise to English, Anglo-Norman, and Scottish writings of the continental ethos of fyn amor, the importance of social class in medieval discourses on love, and the question of whether gender was a determining factor in the construction of these texts. In keeping with the volume's fundamental belief in variety and debate, the essays themselves contain an internal dialectic, with individual scholars expressing different views of similar bodies of work or even individual texts. The contributors to this volume are among the foremost scholars working in the field of medieval studies today.
Review
"Readers seeking proof that good things still come in small packages need look no further than this fine collection....an indispensible resource for any reader interested in the subject matter.....simultaneously sophisticated and accesible."--
Economia “This account of Middle English love literature, also of its historical background and continental context, is impressively comprehensive and illuminating. Beside lively discussions of English representations of the characteristically medieval but hotly debated courtly love mode other hitherto less recognized modes are brought into focus, especially in valuable essays dealing with early Middle English and Anglo-Norman romances. Among many excellent chapters in this volume is the editors own subtle and beautifully written contribution on love and aesthetics at the end of the Middle English period.”--Thomas G. Duncan, University of St Andrews
“Cooney has here assembled a distinguished array of medievalists who, in a wide-ranging series of essays, address the big questions surrounding the debate on love in the Middle Ages. This is a very strong collection and will certainly be widely consulted.”--J. A. Burrow, Emeritus Professor, University of Bristol
“The term ‘courtly love will not be readily recuperated from the scorn that has been heaped upon it and the misrepresentations to which it has been subjected, but the medieval cult of idealized sexual love is here, in this book, definitively restored to its central position in the understanding of medieval English literature. A series of probing essays demonstrates how the courtly cult of ‘being in love, in all its multiplicities, variously expressive of male or female subjectivity, and oriented according to whatever moral and cultural conventions, overrode constraint and gave narrative its very heart-beat.”--Derek A. Pearsall, Harvard University (retired)
“This collection of essays presents a series of lively reassessments of English and Scottish writings on love in the Middle Ages. It is both insightful and accessible.”--Douglas Gray, J.R.R. Tolkien Professor of English Literature and Language Emeritus, University of Oxford
Synopsis
This collection examines the question of the relevance of the "fyn amour" ethos to English amatory texts. Essays cover gender, social and textual practice, philosophy, and the politics of desire.
Synopsis
This is a set of essays from many of the leading scholars in the world of medieval studies, which addresses a wide diversity of texts and genres and their diverse perspectives on love. Attention is given to interaction between English writings and putative continental and international influences, with particular emphasis on the works of Chaucer.
Synopsis
A study of writings about love in the English Middle Ages.
About the Author
Helen Cooney has taught Medieval and Renaissance literature at Queen Mary and Westfield College, University of London, Nottingham University, and Trinity College, Dublin. She has published numerous articles on both Chaucer and Spenser and has just completed a monograph on the courtly poetry of Chaucer, entitled Chaucer’s Theodicies of Love. Her increasing interest in the fifteenth century was reflected in a collection of essays which she edited, Nation, Court and Culture: New Essays on Fifteenth Century English Poetry (2001). Her current major project is a study of how the Middle Ages ‘becomes’ the Renaissance in English literature, as seen through the lens of courtly allegory. She is currently lecturer in Medieval and Renaissance English at Trinity College, Dublin.
Table of Contents
Introduction--Helen Cooney * The Reality of Courtly Love--Bernard O'Donoghue * Love before Troilus--Helen Cooper * Love and Loyalty in Middle English Romances--Corinne Saunders * "The Unequal Scales of Love": Love and Social Class in Andreas Capellanus'
De Amore and Some Other Texts--John Scattergood *
Troilus and Criseyde: Love in a Manner of Speaking--Barry Windeatt * The Wisdom of Old Women: Alisoun of Bath as
Auctrice--Alastair Minnis * "Nat that I chalange any thing of right": Love, Loyalty and Legality in the
Franklin's Tale--Neil Cartlidge *
The Floure and the Leafe and the Cultural Shift in the Role of the Poet in Fifteenth-Century England--Helen Cooney * Romancing the
Rose: the readings of Chaucer and Christine--Martha Driver * Entrapment or Empowement? Women and Discourses of Love and Marriage in the Fifteenth Century --Carol M. Meale * Writing about Love in Late Medieval Scotland--Priscilla Bawcutt