Conscience and the Composition of Piers Plowman provides a detailed
account of one of the central personified figures in William
Langland's Piers Plowman. Previous critical accounts of Conscience
either focus on discussions of the faculty conscience in scholastic
discourse, or eschew personification allegory as a useful category in
order to argue for the figure's development or education as a
character during the poem. But Conscience only appears to develop as
he is re-presented, in the course of Piers Plowman, within a series of
different literary modes. And he changes not only during the
composition of the various episodes in different modes that make up
the single version, but also during the composition of the poem as a
series of three different versions. The versions of Piers Plowman
form, this book argues, a single continuous narrative or argument, in
which revisions to Conscience's role in one version are predicated
upon his cumulative 'experiences' in the earlier versions. Drawing on
a variety of materials in both Middle English and Latin, Sarah Wood
illustrates the wide range of contemporary discourses Langland
employed as he composed Conscience in the three versions of the poem.
By showing how Langland transformed Conscience as he composed the A, B
and C texts, Conscience and the Composition of Piers Plowman offers a
new approach to reading the serial versions of the poem. While the
versions of Piers Plowman have customarily been presented and read in
parallel-text formats, Wood shows that Langland's revisions are newly
comprehensible if the three versions are read in sequence.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191636486
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter