The English Romance in Time is a study of English romance across the
Middle Ages and the Renaissance. It explores romance motifs - quests
and fairy mistresses, passionate heroines and rudderless boats and
missing heirs - from the first emergence of the genre in French and
Anglo-Norman in the twelfth century down to the early seventeenth.
This is a continuous story, since the same romances that constituted
the largest and most sophisticated body of secular fiction in the
Middle Ages went on to enjoy a new and vibrant popularity at all
social levels in black-letter prints as the pulp fiction of the Tudor
age. This embedded culture was reworked for political and Reformation
propaganda and for the 'writing of England', as well as providing a
generous reservoir of good stories and dramatic plots. The different
ways in which the same texts were read over several centuries, or the
same motifs shifted meaning as understanding and usage altered,
provide a revealing and sensitive measure of historical and cultural
change. The book accordingly looks at those processes of change as
well as at how the motifs themselves work, to offer a historical
semantics of the language of romance conventions. It also looks at how
politics and romance intersect - the point where romance comes true.
The historicizing of the study of literature is belatedly leading to a
wider recognition that the early modern world is built on medieval
foundations. This book explores both the foundations and the building.
Similarly, generic theory, which previously tended to operate on
transhistorical assumptions, is now acknowledging that genre interacts
crucially with cultural context - with changing audiences and
ideologies and means of dissemination. The generation into which
Spenser and Shakespeare were born was the last to be brought up on a
wide range of medieval romances in their original forms, and they
could therefore exploit their generic codings in new texts aimed at
both elite and popular audiences. Romance may since then have lost
much of its cultural centrality, but the universal appeal of these
same stories has continued to fuel later works from Bunyan's Pilgrim's
Progress to C.S. Lewis and Tolkien.
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Transforming Motifs from Geoffrey of Monmouth to the Death of Shakespeare
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191530272
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter