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'Piers Plowman' and the Medieval Discourse of Desire (Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature)

'Piers Plowman' and the Medieval Discourse of Desire (Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature)

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Nicolette Zeeman
Cambridge University Press, 4/20/2006
EAN 9780521856102, ISBN10: 0521856108

Hardcover, 328 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm
Language: English

This ambitious work links William Langland's great poem Piers Plowman to wider medieval enquiries into the nature of intellectual and spiritual desire. Nicolette Zeeman traces the history of psychology and its iconography in medieval devotional and theological literature, stretching back to St Augustine and Gregory the Great, and shows how an understanding of these traditions opens up a fresh reading of Piers Plowman. She challenges the consensus according to which the poem narrates an essentially positive 'education' of the will, and reveals instead a narrative of desire emerging from rebuke, loss and denial. This radical reading revolutionises our thinking about Piers Plowman, and sheds light on the history of medieval psychology, devotion, pastoral care, medieval textual theory and literary history.

List of illustrations
Acknowledgements
Note on the text
Introduction
trial by desire
1. 'Painful lettings'
sin, temptation and tribulation
2. Powers of knowledge and desire
3. Studying the word
4. The word heard and written
5. Seeing and suffering in nature
6. Clergie and kynde in Piers Plowman
7. Imaginatyf and the feast of Pacience
8. A poem shaped by knowing and wanting
Bibliography
Index.