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Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $67.50

Format:
Hardback
528 pp.
12 b/w illustrations, 135 mm x 216 mm

ISBN-13:
9780199575381

Publication date:
October 2017

Imprint: OUP UK


The Oxford English Literary History

Volume 1: 1000-1350: Conquest and Transformation

Laura Ashe

Series : The Oxford English Literary History

The Oxford English Literary History is the new century's definitive account of a rich and diverse literary heritage that stretches back for a millennium and more.

Each of these thirteen groundbreaking volumes offers a leading scholar's considered assessment of the authors, works, cultural traditions, events, and ideas that shaped the literary voices of their age. The series will enlighten and inspire not only everyone studying, teaching, and researching in English Literature, but all serious readers.

This book describes and seeks to explain the vast cultural, literary, social, and political transformations which characterized the period 1000-1350. Change can be perceived everywhere at this time. Theology saw the focus shift from God the Father to the suffering Christ, while religious experience became ever more highly charged with emotional affectivity and physical devotion. A new philosophy of interiority turned attention inward, to the exploration of self, and the practice of confession expressed that interior reality with unprecedented importance. The old understanding of penitence as a whole and unrepeatable event, a second baptism, was replaced by a new allowance for repeated repentance and penance, and the possibility of continued purgation of sins after death. The concept of love moved centre stage: in Christ's love as a new explanation for the Passion; in the love of God as the only means of governing the self; and in the appearance of narrative fiction, where heterosexual love was suddenly represented as the goal of secular life. In this mode of writing further emerged the figure of the individual, a unique protagonist bound in social and ethical relation with others; from this came a profound recalibration of moral agency, with reference not only to God but to society. More generally, the social and ethical status of secular lives was drastically elevated by the creation and celebration of courtly and chivalric ideals. In England the ideal of kingship was forged and reforged over these centuries, in intimate relation with native ideals of counsel and consent, bound by the law. In the aftermath of Magna Carta, and as parliament grew in reach and importance, a politics of the public sphere emerged, with a literature to match. These vast transformations have long been observed and documented in their separate fields. The Oxford English Literary History: Volume 1: 1000-1350: Conquest and Transformation offers an account of these changes by which they are all connected, and explicable in terms of one another.

Readership : Scholars and students of English literature in the high middle ages.

Introduction
1. England, c. 1000: this world is in haste
2. Conquests, kings, and transformations
3. Know yourself: interiority, love, and God
4. The Bellator and Chevalerie: the struggle for the warrior's soul
5. It is different with us: love, individuality, and fiction
6. Conversations with the living and the dead
7. Engletere and the Inglis: Conflict and construction
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index

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Laura Ashe is Associate Professor of English and a Tutorial Fellow of Worcester College, Oxford. Her main research interests lie in high medieval literary and cultural history. Educated at Cambridge and Harvard, her books include Fiction and History in England, 1066-1200 (2007), Early Fiction in England: From Geoffrey of Monmouth to Chaucer (2015), and Richard II (2016). She is one of the editors of New Medieval Literatures, has edited several other collaborative volumes, and published numerous articles, on England's multilingualism, kingship and national identity, romance and historiography, saints' lives, chivalry, warfare, medieval colonialism, vernacularity, and early modern legacies, among other things.

Making Sense - Margot Northey and Joan McKibbin

Special Features

  • A new perspective on the breadth and depth of medieval culture and society.
  • Individual chapters cover particular themes.
  • Genuinely interdisciplinary, drawing on a range of methods and approaches.
  • Explores works written in a variety of languages, so that the reader encounters literature in the way that contemporaries would have.