This collection investigates how the late-medieval household acted as a sorter, user and disseminator of different kinds of ready information, from the traditional and authoritative to the innovative and newly made. Building on work on the noble and bourgeois medieval household, it considers bourgeois, gentry and collegiate households on both sides of the English Channel. The book argues that there is a dynamic and reciprocal relationship between domestic experience and its forms of cultural expression. Contributors address a range of cultural productions, including conduct texts, romances and comic writing, estates-management literature, medical writing, household music and drama and manuscript anthologies. Their studies provide a fresh illustration of the late-medieval household’s imaginative scope, its extensive internal and external connections and its fundamental centrality to late-medieval cultural production.
İçerik tablosu
1 Introduction: the home life of information – Glenn D. Burger and Rory G. Critten
2 Knowledge production in the late-medieval married household: the case of Le Menagier de Paris – Glenn D. Burger
3 Knowing incompetence: elite women in Caxton’s Book of the Knight of the Tower – Elliot Kendall
4 Renovating the household through affective invention in manuscripts Ashmole 61 and Advocates 19.3.1 – Myra Seaman
5 The Christmas drama of the household of St John’s College, Oxford – Elisabeth Dutton
6 Household song in Chaucer’s Manciple’s Tale – Sarah Stanbury
7 Field knowledge in gentry households: ‘pears on a willow’? – Nadine Kuipers
8 Domestic ideals: healing, reading, and perfection in the late-medieval household – Michael Leahy
9 Macrocosm and microcosm in household manuscript Cambridge, University Library MS Ff.2.38 – Raluca Radulescu
10 The multilingual English household in a European perspective: London, British Library MS Harley 2253 and the traffic of texts – Rory G. Critten
Index
Yazar hakkında
Dr Anke Bernau is Lecturer in Medieval Literature and Culture at the University of Manchester