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This book explores both the narrative design and fundamental
thematic preoccupations of short comic tales that flourished in
late medieval Germany and that provided bawdy entertainment for
larger audiences of public recitals as well as for smaller numbers
of individual readers.
Die lange Reihe der Forschungen zu Text-Bild-Relationen in
mittelalterlicher Dichtung wird in diesem Sammelband um starker
thematisch und poetologisch ausgerichtete Aspekte erganzt: Zum
einen wird Visuelles, wenn es als Gegenstand der Texte in den
philologischen Blick gerat, in seiner sinnstiftenden Funktion fur
Einzeltexte ausgedeutet; dabei lassen sich bestimmte literarische
Visualisierungsoptionen profilieren. Zum anderen werden Vorschlage
zu einer Poetik des Visuellen formuliert, die der mittelalterlichen
Literatur in spezifischer Weise eingeschrieben ist. Die Beitrage
untersuchen das Spannungsfeld von Visualisierung und Wahrnehmung
sowohl an hofischen Dichtungen als auch an religiosen Texten und
machen so ein breites Panorama mittelalterlicher Literatur in ihrem
Potential, Sehen zu inszenieren, sichtbar. Der Band versammelt
Vortrage, die im Rahmen des 21. Anglo-German Colloquiums in London
im Jahre 2009 gehalten wurden."
This book sheds light on the complexity of medieval German literary
culture as it evolved in the course of the thirteenth century (c.
1220-1290) by analysing the attitudes of narrative poets towards
the issue of authorship. It describes the various ways in which
vernacular writers could address the theme of their own authorship
within their literary works, and explores the tensions that arose
between such authorial strategies on the one hand and their
subsequent manuscript transmission on the other. The first part of
the book deals with the presentation of authorship in the works of
two poets who stand at the heart of literary tradition (Rudolf von
Ems; Konrad von Wurzburg), and involves discussion of such topics
as authorial signature, acrostics, author portraits, and patronage;
the second part deals with two genres (heroic epic; short story)
that evince a rather more problematic relationship with the figure
of the author.
This book investigates how German-language texts from the Middle
Ages and the Early Modern Era helped to form collective and
individual identities through their handling of social norms. Using
case studies, the contributors analyze the shaping of norms for
different text types, social groups, and genders. They also define
the scope allowed by the literature for discussing, establishing,
and questioning expectations regarding social action.
In contrast to the vernacular literary traditions of France, Italy
and England, comic tales in verse flourished in late medieval
Germany, providing bawdy entertainment for larger audiences of
public recitals as well as for smaller numbers of individual
readers. In a sustained close analysis, Sebastian Coxon explores
both the narrative design and fundamental thematic preoccupations
of these short texts. A distinctively performative tradition of
pre-modern narrative literature emerges which invites its
recipients to think, learn and above all to laugh in a number of
different ways.
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