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Romancing Treason - The Literature of the Wars of the Roses (Hardcover)
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Romancing Treason - The Literature of the Wars of the Roses (Hardcover)
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Romancing Treason addresses the scope and significance of the
secular literary culture of the Wars of the Roses, and especially
of the Middle English romances that were distinctively written in
prose during this period. Megan Leitch argues that the pervasive
textual presence of treason during the decades c.1437-c.1497
suggests a way of conceptualising the understudied space between
the Lancastrian literary culture of the early fifteenth century and
the Tudor literary cultures of the early and mid-sixteenth century.
Drawing upon theories of political discourse and interpellation,
and of the power of language to shape social identities, this book
explores the ways in which, in this textual culture, treason is
both a source of anxieties about community and identity, and a way
of responding to those concerns. Despite the context of decades of
civil war, treason is an understudied theme even with regards to
Thomas Malory's celebrated prose romance, the Morte Darthur. Leitch
accordingly provides a double contribution to Malory criticism by
addressing the Morte Darthur's engagement with treason, and by
reading the Morte in the hitherto neglected context of the prose
romances and other secular literature written by Malory's English
contemporaries. This book also offers new insights into the nature
and possibilities of the medieval romance genre and sheds light on
understudied texts such as the prose Siege of Thebes and Siege of
Troy, and the romances William Caxton translated from French. More
broadly, this book contributes to reconsiderations of the
relationship between medieval and early modern culture by focusing
on a comparatively neglected sixty-year interval - the interval
that is customarily the dividing line, the 'no man's land' between
well-but separately-studied periods in English literary studies.
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