_St Francis and Cultural Memory_ explores central aspects of English
national, spiritual, and broader cultural identity through a detailed
yet accessible analysis of a familiar figure: the Franciscan Friar.
Covering more than four hundred years from the late fourteenth to the
late eighteenth centuries, and taking in a wide variety of different
literary and artistic forms, the book charts the changing face of the
Franciscan friar in the English literary imagination, and examines how
developments within this evolving tradition were both shaped by, and
have helped to shape, wider debates within English culture about the
relationship between religious and national identity, and the past and
the present.
Central to this analysis is the notion of cultural memory. At the time
of its suppression in the 1530s, the Franciscan Order was too deeply
assimilated into the social fabric of England either to be forgotten,
or to be credibly labelled an entirely alien presence, despite the
best efforts of Protestant polemicists to do so. Rather, the effect of
the Reformation was to supress, but not completely to erase, memories
of English Franciscans. The Catholic history that English
Protestantism sought to deny was prone to return in unexpected and
often distorted and disturbing forms, so that in the centuries
following the Reformation, Franciscans came to haunt the imagination
of English writers and artists. Appearing in a wide variety of
literary and artistic guises, these ghostly Franciscans functioned as
spectres of a national past which English Protestantism tried to
disavow, but which it was unable entirely to destroy.
Franciscan friars appear in the work of some of the most popular and
influential writers and artists from the fourteenth to the eighteenth
centuries, reflecting the centrality of the Order to ongoing debates
within English culture about religion and national identity. The book
discusses in detail the work of Geoffrey Chaucer, Thomas Malory,
Thomas More, William Shakespeare, William Hogarth, Edward Gibbon, Ann
Radcliffe, and Matthew Lewis. It explores the individual responses of
these writers and artists to the Franciscans and their legacy, and
also highlights the ways in which this shared interest in the Order
reveals hitherto unacknowledged connections between their work.
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The Franciscans and English National Identity from Chaucer to the Gothic
Product details
ISBN
9780192521613
Published
2025
Edition
1. edition
Publisher
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author