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Female Desire in Chaucer's Legend of Good Women and Middle English Romance
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Description
This book aims to re-centre female desire. Identifying a feminine or lesbian hermeneutic in late-medieval English literature, it offers new approaches to medieval texts often denigrated for their omissions and fragmentation, their violence and uneven poetic texture. The hermeneutic tradition Chaucer inherited, stretching from Jerome to Jean de Meun, represents female bodies as blank tablets awaiting masculine inscription, rather than autonomous agents. In the Legend, Chaucer considers the unspoken problem of female desires and bodies that resist, evade, and orient themselves away from such a position.
Can women take on hermeneutic authority, that phallic capacity, without rendering themselves monstrous or self-defeating? This question resonates through three Middle English romances succeeding the Legend: the alliterative Morte Arthure, the Sowdone of Babylon, and Undo Your Door. With combative innovation, they repurpose the hermeneutic tradition and Chaucer's use of it to celebrate an array of audacious female desires and embodiments which cross and re-cross established categories of masculine and feminine, licit and illicit, animate and inanimate. Together, these texts make visible the desires and the embodiments of women who otherwise slip out of visibility, in both medieval and post-medieval contexts.
LUCY ALLEN-GOSS is an Irish Research Council postdoctoral research fellow in the Department of History at Trinity College, Dublin.
Product details
- Languages:
- Original: English
- Number of Pages:
- 238
- Publisher:
- D.S.Brewer
- Publication Date:
- 2020-09-01
- Release Date:
- 2020-09-20
- ISBN / EAN:
- 9781843845706
- Weight:
- 526 g
- Dimensions:
- 16/24/2 cm
- GPSR Manufacturer Reference:
- [email protected]
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