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The bureaucratic muse : Thomas Hoccleve and the literature of late medieval England / Ethan Knapp.

Van Pelt Library PR1992.H47 Z68 2001
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Knapp, Ethan, 1966-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Hoccleve, Thomas, 1370?-1450?--Criticism and interpretation.
Hoccleve, Thomas.
Hoccleve, Thomas, 1370?-1450?.
Literature and society--England--History--To 1500.
Literature and society.
Scriptoria.
History.
Bureaucracy.
Criticism and interpretation.
England.
Great Britain. Privy Council--History--To 1500.
Great Britain.
Great Britain. Privy Council.
Bureaucracy--Great Britain--History--To 1500.
Scriptoria--England--History--To 1500.
Civilization, Medieval, in literature.
Physical Description:
x, 210 pages ; 24 cm
Place of Publication:
University Park, Pa. : Pennsylvania State University Press, [2001]
Summary:
Long neglected as a marginal and eccentric figure, Thomas Hoccleve (1367-1426) wrote some of the most sophisticated and challenging poetry of the late Middle Ages. Full of gossip and autobiographical detail, his work has made him immensely useful to modern scholars, yet Hoccleve the poet has remained decidedly in the shadow of Geoffrey Chaucer.
In The Bureaucratic Muse, Ethan Knapp investigates the connections between Hoccleve's poetic corpus and his life as a clerk of the Privy Seal. The early fifteenth century was a watershed moment in the histories of both centralized bureaucracy and English vernacular literature. These were the decades in which Chaucer's experiments in a courtly English poetry were rendered into a stable tradition and in which the central writing offices at Westminster emerged from personal government into the full-blown modernity of independent civil service. Knapp shows the importance of Hoccleve's poetry as a site where these two histories come together. By following the shifting relationship between the texts of vernacular poetry and those of bureaucratic documents, Knapp argues that the roots of vernacular fiction reach back into the impersonal documentary habits of a bureaucratic class.
The Bureaucratic Muse, the first full-length study of Hoccleve since 1968, provides an authoritative historical and textual treatment of this important but underappreciated writer. Chapters focus on Hoccleve's importance in consolidating key concepts of the literary field such as autobiography, religious heterodoxy, gendered identity, and post-Chaucer textuality. This book will be of interest to scholars of Middle English literature, autobiography, gender studies, and the history of literary institutions.
Contents:
Bureaucratic identity and the construction of the self in Hoccleve's Formulary and "La male regle"
The letter of Cupid: gender and the foundations of poetic authority
"Wrytynge no travaille is": scribal labor in the Regement of princes
Eulogies and usurpations: father Chaucer in the Regement of princes
Hoccleve and heresy: image, memory and the vanishing mediator
"Ful bukkissh is his brayn": writing, madness, and bureaucratic culture in the Series.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages [187]-204) and index.
ISBN:
0271021357
OCLC:
46538530

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